i Copyright, State Press. 1990 Tempe, Arizona Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Vol. 16 No. 34 Wednesday, October 17,1990 D e c is io n o n tu itio n p r o p o s a ls d e la y e d By KEVIN SHEH S tate Press ASU President Lattie Coor said the Council of Presidents w ill hold off until Thursday to make its tuition and financial aid recommendation — a delay student leaders hope w ill lead to lower tuition numbers. The Council of Presidents, comprised of the presidents from A rizo n a ’s three universities, met in à four-hour session Tu esday afternoon, and although no consensus was reached, Coor said the meeting was productive. Coor guaranteed the COP would-have tuition figures tabulated in time for the Arizona Board of Regents’ Resources Committee Meeting in Tucson Thursday. “ W e w ill d e fin ite ly have a recommendation on Thursday and it will definitely be on the table,” Coor said. Student Regent Danny Siciliano said the COP delay could be a positive signal. ‘ ‘The fact that they are taking (until Thursday) might be a good sign,” , said Siciliano, who sits on the Resources Committee. “ I'm hopeful that they are taking (the Arizona Students Association) proposals seriously.” The Resources Committee will consider the COP’s recommendation and devise a tuition proposal for the regents. A fter a hearing Oct. 29 — in which students will have an opportunity to voice tuition concerns — the regents will set tuition Nov. 9. The COP, in fashioning a tuition proposal, is using the recommendations of a task force it form ed earlier this year to investigate The issue. The task force, made up of student leaders, administrators and financial aid experts, split last week oh the cost of education formula and financial aid. The group disbanded, leaving the task of disseminating the different dilemmas to the university presidents. Coor said the COP has narrowed down the task force’s proposals. “ We really identified the m ajor options that we thought should be considered in finalizing a recommendation on the cost of education issue, on the level of tuition and on financial a id ," he said. The COP staff will take the options, plug in the numbers to see what each tuition proposal yields and report back to the presidents, Coor said. ‘ ‘The Council of Presidents w ill have a conference call to perfect the plan late Thursday morning,” the ASU president said. “ And then it will go on to the table at the Resources Committee Thursday.” Coor said he has stayed in “ very close contact” with Associated Students of ASU President Matt Ortega, Arizona Students’ Association officials and Student Regent Danny Siciliano, adding that he recently met with student leaders, and the COP has considered their position. “ That was part of the stuff that we had on th e t a b le as w e w e r e , d o in g ou r deliberations,” he said. But Coor declined to reveal any specifics on the remaining options being weighed by the council. “ I think I w ill wait until we get the a n a ly s is done ra th e r than id e n tify specifics,” he said. Ortega said he met with Coor early Tuesday morning and reiterated his plea for a low tuition increase matched dollar for dollar with financial aid. WIN Powma/State Prats H ow Many Fingers...? Shaw n W halen, a senior broadcasting m ajor, is given a field sobriety tes t Tuesday by Tem pe P olice O ffic e r E . L W ells a fte r consum ing fiv e 12 ounce cans o f beer in a one hour period. T he tes t w as o ne o f several used in a dem onstration to determ ine levels o f in to x ication by th e Tem pe Police D epartm ent as part Of A lcohol A w areness W eek. Turn to Tuition* page 11. Ethics council proposal awaits Senate vote By KENNETH BROWN S tate Press The Associated Students of ASU Senate will vote Tuesday on whether to establish its own special ethics council, after the leadership body’s government operations committee approved the proposal 3-1 yesterday. The bill — co-authored by ASASU College of Education Sen. Adrian Fontes, College of Nursing Sen. G reg Schulz and College of Fine Arts Sen. Sean Collins — is designed to establish a “ watchdog group” to investigate questionable behavior by student senators. The bill was introduced to ASASU at the Oct. 9 Senate meeting, and will now go into its second reading next time the Senate meets. ‘ ‘W e’ve got to be able to police ourselves somehow without going to the extremes of impeachment,” Fontes said. “ I just think it should be considered.” The bill’s wording states that the proposed five-man committee would meet on the written request of an ASASU senator who filed a complaint against another. It also would allow the committee to follow through on any punishments, including recommending impeachment. Fontes predicted senators could also face suspended speaking and voting privileges for ethics violations, defining the term as “ anything the ASASU decides is unethical.” “ I ’m not making a bunch of cops here,” said Fontes as he Turn to Ethics* page 11. Riot victim recalls pain, em otion s o n e year later By TENNY TATUSIAN S tate Press Matthew Springer heard someone yelling outside his room early one Sunday morning last October and stepped out to see what was going on. Before he got a good look at the 100 or more people rioting outside the Delta Chi fraternity house on 1402 S. Jen Tilly Lane, he was struck between the eyes with a rock the size of a softball. Doctors said if the rock had struck his forehead a little to the left or right, S p r in g e r , 20, w ou ld h a v e s u ffe r e d permanent brain damage or even death. Look w ho’s talking: Former Gov. Bruce Babbitt will speak to day on proposition 402, a bill to establish a paid MLK holiday. Page 10 Now, a year after Springer’s nightmare, the man authorities be lieve threw, the rock will face misdemeanor charges. “ They almost killed m e ,” S p rin ger said. “ That’s not a misde meanor. Jaywalking is a misdemeanor.” Springer fell to the S p rin g e r gro u n d u n con sciou s after the rock hit him. He was dragged inside by another fraternity member and locked in a bathroom for protection. Tempe police said this m ove saved Springer’s life. Springer doesn’t rem em ber anything after he was hit. In fact, while bleeding profusely in the tiny room, he had no idea that the rioters — the prim ary provokers believed to be Mesa Community College football players — rampaged through the fraternity house, attacking many of the members. The mob rushed inside the condominium, stole a bicycle and destroyed furniture, doors, walls, carpeting and appliances. The fraternity house is located near M XZ nightclub, form erly M ax’s 919 located at 919 Pinheads: D u ck b ill: Pinball machines have kept their allure for inany and are experiencing a resurgence in popularity. Bill Musgrave, University o f Oregon’s quarter-' Page 17 E. Apache Blvd., and the fraternity parking lot is often used by the bar’s patrons. The fight began at about 1:45 a.m. Sunday morning on Oct. 8, after the fraternity members asked a group of about 20 people not to park in the fraternity’s lot near the club. A fter leaving quietly, the group returned with about 60 people from the bar, and a riot broke out. Police arrived within minutes of a 911 call placed by one of the fraternity members, and the group dispersed before arrests could be made. Turn to MGC, page 13. Today’s weather: Sunny with a high In the low 90s. Tonight: Clear with a low in the mid 60s. C l a s s i f l e d » . . ^•—•••••—••••25 College CuÍture..u.rt»..oi^».o.>ó>'»o».»MótÍ7 Crossword 24 H o r o s c o p e s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •••••••■27, S p o r t s . 21 Wednesday, O ctober 17,1990 Page 2 Slate Pies* W ater, sew age plants topic o f b o n d package By M ICHELLE ROBERTS S tate Press If voters pass a $78 million bond package Oct. 23, they w ill significantly contribute to the improvement of the city’s water and sewage facilities, Tem pe officials said. If the monetary bond is approved, $30 million will be used to improve Tem pe’s water and sewer plants. This would help upgrade water distribution lines, improve the w ater distribution computerized control system, expand the existing wastewater treatment plant and construct a new water réclamation plant. The $78 million bond package is for capital im p ro v e m e n ts , in clu d in g w a te r and s e w a g e , tra n s p o rta tio n , co m m u n ity services facilities and law enforcement. Jim Jones, the city ’s public works director, said he thinks the most important project within the proposed water and sew age im provem ent package is the construction o f a new water reclamation plant in north Tempe, adding that $21 million would help build the proposed treatment facility. Officials predict that in the plant’s beginning operating stages, it could treat up to six million gallons of waste each day and eventually up to 15 million. Jones said the city is anxious to get the plant’s construction underway. “ We have already acquired the land and plans for that project,” he said. “ I f the bond is approved, we plan to advertise and start building it (the plant) next year.” Tem pe officials said the plant should be finished by May 1993 and w ill be paid for over the 5-year bond period. The city is in need of the new plant because it has outgrown the Phoenix storage plant on 9lst Avenue, Jones said. R ic h O e s te r le , T e m p e ’ s a ssista n t management services director, agreed with Jones. “ W e have a certain allocation (on how much waste Tem pe can store in the Phoenix treatment center), and our (population) growth in the 80’s has pushed us over that amount,” he said. Another funtion of the plant would be to recycle sewer water and make it reusable for the irrigation of parks and golf courses. Jones said the reclaimed water would be used for landscaping the ASU Karsten Golf Course and filling the Salt R iver as part of the Rio Salado Project. Jones added that the water and sewage bond is not something the city should ignore. “ It’s (w ater and sewage facilities) a basic service that the community must be provided (w ith ),” he said. Officials said the additional water and sew a ge im provem ents a re necessary because Tem pe is growing, and new developments are filling what was once open land. Oesterle said new homes and businesses Create a demand for more water service and add pressure to the present wastewater system. Another large portion of the water and sewage bond, $8 million, would fund a 12 million gallon water storage facility in south Tempe. Oesterle said the new storage tank would increase the cities water storage capacity from 41 million gallons a day to 53 million gallons a day. D e n z il Jon es, T e m p e w a s te w a te r supervisor, said the construction of the new plant would reduce the demand for water. “ The new plant would mean being able to reuse a valuable resource (w ater) again and again for irrigation uses,” he said, adding that the wastewater department’s importance is not always recognized. “ W e’re almost like the silent service — the ones you don’t see,” he said. “ But w e’re the ones responsible for always making drinking w a ter a v a ila b le , w a ter fo r irrigation, and also for developing nice parks and golf courses.” Today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the University community. Any campus club or organization can submit entries for publication to the State Press* located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and will not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot guarantee publication. Deadline for the entries is 1 p.m. the previous business day. Meetings •Alcoholics Anonymous will have an open meeting at noon at the Newman Center on College Avenue and University Drive. Gravity Tours Snowboarding Association will meet at 8 p.m. at Long Wongs on Mill Avenue. •CARP will meet at 7 p.m. in the MU Yavapai Room. •Southeast Asia Studies Program will meet at 12:40 p.m. iri the Language and Literature Building Room A18 to watch a film on Thai masked ballet. •MUAB Culture and Arts Committee will meet at 2:30 p.m. in the MU Santa Cruz Room. New members welcome. •Esperanto at ASU will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Coconino Room. •ASU Undergraduate Law Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. in Armstrong Hall Room 119. LSAT registration continues. •Women Students will meet at 11:45 a.m. in the Women Students Center. •MUAB Film Committee will show “ Driving Miss Daisy” at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Admission is $1. •Golden Key National Honor Society will meet at 5 p.m. in the MU second floor conference room. •Lesbian and Gay Academic Union will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Yuma Room. •MUAB Special Events Committee will show “ Grease” at 4 p.m. in the MU Cinema at no charge. •The Italian Club will meet at 3 p.m. at the Coffee Plantation. •University Fencers’ Club will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Student Recreation Complex Gym C. •MECHA will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the Student Services Building amphitheater. Everyone welcome for this presentation on Chicano/Hispanic art. •Native American Student Association will meet at 5 p.m. in the Multicultural Room. •Students for Life will meet at 2 p.m. in the MU Pima Room. •Arizona Outing Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Pima Room. New members welcome. •Th e Wilderness Society will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Room 218. •Biblical Christian Leadership will meet at 12:30 p.m. on the steps of Danforth Chapel. •Overtim e will meet at 7 p.m. in the MU Cochise Room. •R eal Estate Association will meet at 5:45 p.m. in the MU Navajo Room. ASASU LECTURE SERIES Ho st * APRIL t ^ S , 30’ 1990 F R A N K R E E D 44 months o f captivity: Come hear this man’s terror and welcome him to freedom. “The feelin g o f endless'tim e is crushing. A sentenced prisoner knows the limits o f his sentence. A hostage sees and knows nothing. ” Wednesday, October 17 • 7 p.m. • Arizona Room, M em orial Union World/Nation State Press Page 3 Wednesday, O ctober 17,1990 Soviet free-market system debated MOSCOW (A P ) — Mikhail Gorbachev on Tuesday submitted a scaled-back plan to transform the Soviet economy, eliminating a 500-day deadline for switching to a freemarket system. His action drew an angry response from rival Boris Yeltsin, Gorbachev’s onetime partner in economic reform, who termed the program an attempt “ to preserve the administrative-bureaucratic system.” : Yeltsin, president of the Russian republic, said Russia, the largest republic in the Soviet Union, might ignore the plan and set up its own currency, customs service and arm y. Russian officials have vowed to start a 500-day transition from a planned to a free-m arket economy Nov. 1 . The president’s 66-page blueprint, bearing his signature and delivered to committees of the Soviet legislature, is at least the fourth in a series of plans for reviving the Soviet economy. The latest version would give the Soviet republics new powers to run the nation’s economy, free many prices that had been a r t ific ia lly fix e d and a llo w p riv a te ownership of businesses. The newest Gorbachev plan is the result of a three-week effort with top economists to work out how to alter a highly centralized system that fails to provide adequate food, shelter or services for the country’s 285 million people. “ P eop le’s lives are becoming more difficult, their interest in labor is falling, their faith in the future is crumbling,” the plan says. It says the long shopping lines in which Soviets must stand daily are shameful, and a c k n o w le d g e s r i s i n g fo o d p r ic e s , overcrowded apartments and empty store shelves. Differences among the competing plans have touched on the underpinnings o f Soviet communism: socialist property, collective labor and state ownership of all land. The conflict is so deep that the Supreme Soviet has failed to agree despite dozens of hours of debate. Yeltsin has said that trying to m erge the most rad ical and most con servative economic plans is like “ mating a hedgehog and a snake.” He told the Russian Federation’s Supreme Soviet on Tuesday it will become clear within six months that Gorbachev’s latest plan is flawed. The state news agency Tass carried his remarks. The most radical recipe, named after economist Stanislav Shatalin, calls for moving to a market economy within 500 days. It suggests selling factories to private owners, breaking up collective farms and returning land to peasants. It would gradually lift state controls on prices. G o r b a c h e v p r e v io u s ly b a c k e d a compromise between the Shatalin plan and one drafted under P rim e Minister Nikolai Ryzhkov. That compromise contained many elements of the 500-day scheme but would not move as fast and called for leasing land to individuals. The latest plan, which Gorbachev is to present to the 542-member Supreme Soviet on Friday, sets no time lim it for switching to a market economy but states: ‘ ‘The experience of applying stabilization programs in other countries . . . shows that such a period can take about 1*6 to 2 years.” Some politicians had advised it was unwise to set benchmarks for the transition, because people would complain if deadlines w ere not met. The plan also drops a commitment to private ownership of land, saying only that republic authorities will decide conditions for giving land to people for agriculture. The blueprint borrows heavily from the Shatalin plan in giving the Soviet republics more economic power. “ The main guidelines w ill determine only the principle approaches. E very republic, Moscow and Leningrad have thë right to act as they like within the framework of these guidelines,” said Gorbachev’s spokesman, Vitaly Ignatenko. Moscow and Leningrad have their own governing councils. The plan calls for establishment of an “ inter-republic economic committee” to o v e r s e e r e fo r m s and fo r r e p u b lic representatives to be included in central executive bodies. This is a departure from the tradition of ministries in Moscow dictating to thousands of factories, farms and businesses what to produce, where to sell it and at what price. The plan says that by 1992, only the prices of bread, meat, dairy products and a few other staples would remain fixed by the state. To reduce the huge amount o f money Soviets have stashed in savings, the government would accept advance payment for scarce and costly goods such as cars, computers, telephones, housing and rural plots. The goods would be delivered when they became available, and the government would not pay interest on the money in the interim. Elderly patients survive despite M edicare lim its Killing fields Hum an skulls and bones lie at the end o f the runw ay at Spriggs Payne A irfie ld In M onrovia, Liberia, w here soldiers o f slain President Sam uel Doe reportedly have dum ped bodies of civilian victim s. CHICAGO (A P ) — Contrary to many doctors’ fears, the survival of elderly hospitalized patients improved during the 1980s under the government’s system of limiting Medicare payments, a study says. But the rate at which Medicare patients w ere sent home in • unstable conditions — such as with rapid heartbeats or confusion — jumped from about 10 percent to about 15 percent, said the study of more than 14,000 patients. Unstable patients had a greater likelihood of dying. The chance was about 16 percent within 90 days, compared with about a 10 percent chance for patients discharged in stable condition, the study reported. “ The good news is that over time, there’s better care delivered by doctors and nurses during hospitalization, and the new payment system didn’t interrupt that,” said Dr. Katherine Kahn, who headed the study for the RAND Corp., a non-profit research group based in Santa Monica, Calif. “ However, associated with the introduction o f the new payment system, and probably caused by it, there was an increase in patients discharged with instability,” which “ somewhat reduced the gains in survival overall,” she said. The findings w ere published in Wednesday’s Journal of the Am erican Medical Association. The government footed the entire $3.9 million cost of the study of M edicare’s so-called “ prospective pricing system,” introduced as a cost-saving strategy in 1983. Under prospective pricing, the government limits payment for hospitalization of Medicare patients to a flat rate per admission calculated for each of 470 groups of illnesses. T u rn to M edicare, page 16/ Rare disorder causes sufferers to develop foreign accents NEW YO R K (A P ) — A Baltimore man s u d d e n ly b e g a n s p e a k in g w ith a Scandinavian accent after suffering a stroke, displaying a rare disorder that may shed light on how the brain produces language, a study says. The man, who had no experience with foreign languages, sounded both Nordic and unfamiliar with English, said Dr. Dean Tippett. “ He was pretty clear, everyone who hearc^ him said he sounded Scandinavian or Nordic,” said Tippett, a neurophysiology fellow at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore. The 32-year-old man en joyed , his new accent at first, saying he hoped it would help attract women, Tippett said. But by the time his accent had largely faded, six weeks after the stroke, he said he was happy to be speaking like an American again. His speech was normal by about 3Vz months after the stroke. The man had what’s known as foreign accent syndrome, a rare condition in which a brain malfunction produces speech alterations that sound like a foreign accent. Other reported cases in Americans have involved apparent German, Spanish, Welsh, Scottish, Irish and Italian accents. The syndrome is triggered by bleeding in the brain, head injuries or strokes. A stroke is a blockage of blood supply to an area of the brain. Scientists say studying the syndrome m ay reveal secrets about how particular parts of the the brain contribute to spoken language. Tippett spoke in a telephone interview before presenting the Baltim ore case Tuesday at the annual meeting of the Am erican N eurological Association in Atlanta. Im m ediately after the stroke, the man’s speech was slurred for a day or two. His accent appeared as he recovered from that, Tippett said. The man typically added extra vowel sounds as he spoke, saying such things as, “ How are you today-ah?” Tippett said. His voice also rose in pitch at the end of sentences, as i f asking a question. Some vowel sounds w ere also substituted, making “ hill” com e out as “ heel” and “ quite” as “ quiet” with the vowel sound drawn out. “ That” was pronounced as “ dat.” Other language features just made him sound foreign, such as putting the accent on the wrong syllable, generally avoiding contractions and saying such things as “ I come back” instead of “ I cam e back,” Tippett said. Arnold Aronson, a M ayo Clinic speech pathologist who has evaluated about 20 people with the syndrome, said he knew of only about a dozen additional cases in the scientific literature. Other cases have produced a French accent in a British person and a Polish accent in a young Czech, he said. Some 40 percent of cases he knew of produced German, Swedish or Norwegian accents, he said, A person’s native tongue has no bearing on which accent appears, he said. The acquired accent may become “ rather permanent,” depending on where the brain is injured, said Dr. Elliott D. Ross, director o f the clinical research program at the Neuropsychiatric Research Institute in Fargo, N. D. Aronson said many people with the disorder are misdiagnosed as having a psychiatric disturbance. Most patients he has seen w ere well-adjusted, he said. The best known case of the syndrome was reported in 1947. A 30-year-old Norwegian woman who was struck in the head by shrapnel from a Nazi air raid began speaking with a German accent. “ Because people in her town hated G e r m a n s , t h is w a s p a r t i c u l a r l y troublesome for her,” Tippett said. “ She would go into shops and stores, and people refused to w ait on her.” Opinion State Press Wednesday, O ctober 17, 1990 Page 4 Give George a break Bush show s p o litic a l saavy b y d efen d in g the rich Mike Royko Tribune Media Syndicate President Bush is being unfairly rapped for his refusal to go along with congressmen who want to raise the taxes of the wealthy. But by backing away from the proposed tax hike, he has shown himself to be both compassionate and politically astute. Unlike Congress, Bush senses that soaking the rich would unleash a furious political backlash. W e would turn on our T V sets and see hordes of angry ladies in mink coats leaping from their Lincolns and Cadillacs to picket the White House. The letter pages of newspapers would be filled with outbursts from readers saying things like: “ President Bush has betrayed every wealthy fam ily in America. By raising our taxes, he has made sure that this w ill indeed be a cold and bleak Christmas for m y immigrant cleaning lady, since I will now have to cut her from five to four days a week and omit her holiday bonus. Wake up, Am erica’s rich! Do you want to scrub your own floor?" The timing for such a tax proposal could not be worse, as Bush surely recognized. This is the season when most country clubs hold their annual membership meetings. And in clubhouses across the nation, men would be jumping and shouting: “ F ie upon the motion to repaint the ball washers blue. There are more urgent matters at hand, I say that we, the members of the Y e Old Thinn L ip ;» Country Club, send a resolution to Bush condemning his treachery and revoking his standing as a WASP, a golfer and a member of of our social class. The man is nothing more than a Bolshevik in Brooks Brothers’ clothing.” And it isn’t only the rich who would be against increasing the tax on the rich by 3 or 4 percent. Take Bill Bentback, who has swept floors and emptied wastebaskets in the same factory for 35 years. When asked about the proposed tax hike, he said : “ No, it would be a terrible thing to do. The spendable income of the man who owns this factory would shrink to only $480,000 a year, and when I go to clean his office, he would become grouchy and riot say hello tom e. And without that, I don’t think I could go on. I would much rather they find some way to increase m y taxes. A fter all, I ’m already on the cutting edge of being poor and miserable, so I might as well go all the way. Instead of feeding scraps to my old hound dog, I ’ll get rid of the dog and eat the scraps m yself!” Bentback touched on a key economic truth that Bush apparently understands, as did Ronald Reagan, who cut the L E T T E R THE HI6WST W CKMNcy BETWEEN KICK AND POOR.. „ANT THE 'nS HtóHEJnW EÍ. BUT DON'T Worm:.. I ...WE'RE WORKING Oil . THAT 1AÇT ONE. Ill taxes of the wealthy while clipping the middle class, which didn’t seem to mind, since they kept voting for him. And that economic truth is that no m atter what you do to the taxes of those who are stretching to make ends meet, they will still be stretching to make ends meet. So as Dr. I. M. Kookie, the noted expert on a lot o f stuff, has said: “ The ends will never meet, so they might as well keep stretching. It’s good exercise.” On the other hand, by taxing the rich, you run the risk of not making them rich anymore. It was put most succinctly by the valet in a movie called “ A New L eaf.” His rich employer squandered his fortune and he wondered what would become of him. The valet said: “ You w ill be poor in the only true sense of the word. You w ill not be rich.” So, if the rich aren’t rich anymore, they w ill be poor. And how can w e go on taking pride in being the richest, most powerful country in the world if our rich people become poor? As it is now, we no longer have the world’s top moneybags. The Japanese have more billionaires than w e do. So does Europe. And even after being kicked out of their palaces, the homeless Kuwaitis have more billions stashed than Donald Trump ever dreamed of. Do we want all of them pointing at us and laughing and saying: “ Nyah, nyah, w e’re rich and you’re not, so there” ? Besides, those who aren’t rich need role models, someone to look up to. That’s why they read People magazine and watch “ Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous.” Does Congress think they want to open People and see Madonna wearing an old house dress? Or Bill Cosby putting up storm windows? No, George Bush should be praised for his bold and humane stance. As old Walt, a toothless and grizzled panhandler, said to me: “ I f he taxes the rich, they won’t have any pocket change to give me, and what w ill happen to my career? Bless that man he’s doing it all for m e.” S Ladies* man Editor: Seems to m e as if Thurston Hanson has his head “ up a Huskie’s back end” and needs to pull it out to “ smell the coffee” — an incredible feat as he is, as indicated by his writing and rhetoric skills as an English major, certainly full o f excrement. For someone who waxes “ joyous” over seeing the word “ penis” in print, I doubt that’s too harsh of a judgement. Whatever happened to the men that opened doors for ladies (emphasis on the word ladies, not fem ales), to those who can meet another of the opposite sex without insisting on a bit of casual intercourse to finish o ff the evening, or to people who actually know the meaning of politeness and respect for others? In other words, what happened to gentlemen? Or for that matter, to ladies? Oh, I know what’s coming my way now — a fierce rebuttal from the campus feminists. Well, go for it and get it over with, but, after E D I T O R I A L F F STATE PRESS do not reflect the opinion o f the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: C O r Y EDITORS: Kellys Ketch, Michael LaMantia. C A R T O O N IS T S : Rob Minton, Julie Slgwart C O L U M N IS T : Nicole Carroll. M A G A Z IN E STAFF: Michelle Cruff, Vicki Culver, Christine Herbranaon, Lori Lappln. Deborah Nemko, Jon Wriz, Kramer Asst. Opinion Ed [tor........................~— „J U L IA G O O D R U M Photo Editor.___________________________________ ,T. J. S O K O L Sport, E d it o r Z .Z Z ____ ________________________PA U L C O R O Wetzel. P R O D U C T IO N : Casaaundra C s vincas, Dane Christ, Holly Hiatt, Jeffrey Lucas, M ark Not haft, Lynne Senzek, John P. Asst. Sports E d it o r Z Z ___________________ K R IS T IM M O N S Graphic, Editor.__ ____________________ c____ STEVE K E IC U N Asst. Copy Chief..__ .____________ ______- _________JILL TIBKE * Smith, Eric Zotcavage. A D V E R T IS IN G REPRESENTATIVES: Dan Ellatrom. Todd Martin, Christine Millan, Mike Morris, Terri Smith, John Vaccaro, Bill VanZanten. Magazine Editor.____________ — ... ......... M E G H A LV E R SO N Assoc. Magazine Editor-___ — .............R O B Y N PIN K S T O N Asst. Magazine Editor..........-:..-..:-__ ..—C A M N C U M M IN S ....... The State Press is published M onday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, R E P O R T E R S : Kenneth B row n, A n ita Carcone, Teena fempe,.Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602)965-2292. W e do:not Chadwell, Jeff Concors. Joseph Crawford, Andrew Faught, Jennifer Franklin, Aaron Levy, Patricia Mah, Michelle P au l Michelle Roberts, Girth Shch. Christina Schroeder, Kristie an sw er questions o f a general nature. A d vertisin g and/ Production: (602) 965-7572. The State Press it the only n ew sp ap er exclusively published for and circulated on the A S U .campus. TJte news S P O R T S R E P O R T E R S : D a rren U rban , G re g Z ele, Dan Z o lg j, and views published in this: newpaper are not necessarily those of A S U administration, faculty, staff or student body. I Monique Ilolltn, Will Powers, Tamara Wofford. B O A R D ,: City Editor__________ *_______________ .HOBART R O W L A N D Asst. City Editor....._________________________ KELLY PEARCE Copy Chief.....— „....... - _____ ________K R IS T E N J O H N S O N N ew s Editor____ ___ ____________________ T E N N Y TATUS1AN Opinion Editor.__ _____ _________ ...__________ D A N N O W IC K I P H O T O G R A P H E R S : Irwin Daugherty, Jeoigetts Douglas, Jonathan J. de Jong Senior, Humanities Unsigned editorials reflect the view s o f the editorial board. Individual members o f the editorial board w rite editorials and the board decides on their merit. The editorials S U Z A N N E ROSS Editor N IC O L E F E E R O N Managing Editor all is said and done, I ’ll guarantee that the women of ASU would far prefer to be treated as* ladies rather than as the objects of college boys’ catcalls. Now, if only the women would do their part. . Suzanne Ross N icole Perron D an N o w ic k i Editor M an agin g Editor O p in ion Editor The State Press welcomes and encourages written response bom our readers on any topic. A ll letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full name, class standing and major (or other affiliation with the university) and phone number. Requests for anonymity w ill be granted w ith an appropriate reason. Letters are subject to editing by the opinion page editor. A ll letters must either be brought in person with a photo I.D. to the State Press front desk in the basement o f Matthews Center o r else addressed to: State Press, 15 Matthews Center, A rizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1502. Opinion State Press Wednesday^OctobeMT^JWO P ages Peace in the M iddle East N e w anti-war activists p rotest U.S. G u lf p resen ce Cody Shearer North American Syndicate NEW Y O R K C IT Y — In form er Attorney General Ramsey Clark’s Greenwich Village law office here, dozens of volunteers have been working late at night in preparation for a series of anti-war demonstrations that will take place this coming Saturday in m ajor cities throughout the country in opposition to Ui S; m ilitary involvement in the Persian Gulf. In what seems like a throwback to the 60’s, a newer and younger generation of peace activists, along with a few dozen supporters in Congress, are beginning to question U. S. policy in the Persian Gulf. They do so not because they are disloyal or unAmerican. To the contrary, these doubters.are concerned that a country they love very deeply is headed toward a potential disaster. And that during potentially extraordinary circumstances, they have an obligation to find a way of preventing a costly conflict. B y in itia lin g an a cid re a p p ra isa l o f the Bush administration's rationale in the Gulf, one can't avoid tackling some tough. I f not awkward, questions. In any reassessment process, however, there are inevitable insights to be gained. By questioning U. S. policy in the region one has to conclude that the U. S. objectives and the broad support of the Am erican people. Accordingly, the near war we find ourselves in requires some answers. The American people don’t have a clear idea of why their troops are in Saudi Arabia, nor does Congress. Will it require 200,000 American troops to protect Saudi Arabia from Ira q ’s Saddam Hussein for the next 10 years? Are our troops in the Gulf today, not to defend Saudi Arabian oil fields, but to support a war to return to power the autocratic billionaire oil shieks of Kuwait? Will our people support President Bush, if he decides to launch a m ilitary invasion of Kuwait and Iraq? If he does, will a civil war erupt at home? How will Am erica's allies abroad respond? Surely these are the questions .Congress ought to be debating day and night. But all too often Members of Congress act like wimps, fearful of challenging a popular president. Our representatives ought to be raising holy hell over the fact that the Bush White House has no intention of letting Congress participate in any final decision regarding war in the Persian Gulf, even though such action may result in the loss o f 20,000 Am erican lives. L E T T E R When the Senate and House leadership suggested that the White House establish a consultation group in discussions on the Persian Gulf crisis, the idea was rejected. At a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Oct. 3, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) pressed Deputy Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger, about the Administration’s view on the need to seek congressional approval before launching a military strike against Iraq. Eagleburger refused to offer any assurances. Other Bush White House officials, like Secretary of Defense Richard Cheney, who as a form er Member of Congress ought to know better, has been effusive in praising the Administration for informing Congress of its decisions. This m ay be true, but only after the fact. Unfortunately, notification is not the same thing as consultation. O f course the reason some Members of Congress insist on being consulted on the question of war, is because they are worried the Bush White House is moving toward conflict in the region. And so are thousands of other Americans, who’ll be demonstrating throughout the country this weekend. The last thing this country needs is a government stripped of public confidence. Contrary to what most Americans believe, we as a people do not hold any special m agic or intellect that can spare us the pain of social disorder if our president decides to go to war. For now those who oppose U S. policy in the Persian Gulf are saying it would be reckless and pointless to attack Iraq, without any further provocation on President Saddam Hussein’s part. To this end, some of our more thoughtful citizens w ill be marching and speaking this weekend, hopefully in a w ay that will appeal to kindness and reason. S Get of f your apathetic butt! Another huskie letter Editor: I'm writing in response to Thurston Hanson's attack on Ms. Gibbons (Oct. 12). M y main concern is your interpretation of catcalling and your understanding of the possible events that occur from this type of action. Consider catcalling on a continuum with verbal sexual harassment, physical sexual harassment and sexual abuse at the opposite end of the spectrum. Perhaps you didn't know but the prim ary motivator for rape stems from the aggressors want of dominance — “ to cater to their macho im ages. ' In most gang rapes, participants are encouraged “ to win peer approval.” Does this sound fam iliar to your own words? Those are two startling similarities between actions on the opposite ends o f a spectrum. I ’m not implying that catcalling always leads to sexual assault or the sex offenders start by catcalling, m y point is that you should not be on that continuum at all. This continuum perpetuates insensitivity and blatant disrespect for others. If you choose to lead this type of life, let m e warn you that you will be very lonely. And Mr. Hanson, please do not include me or the multitudes of other men when you foolishly explain to the world how our fathers taught us the trait of catcalling. Mine did not, Kurt Davis Senior, Liberal Arts Editor: I am urging you to spend a quarter and be heard. Many people feel that writing to, m akinga call or voting fo r an elected official is a waste of time because they aren’t going to listen to us anyway. Well, if w e don’t get off our apathetic butts and start letting these officials know how we feel about the way they are spending our tax dollars and make them accountable, we will not go to the poor h o u s e . it won’t be there anymore. I feel very strongly that the proposed budget package for our nation was stopped because of the phone calls and uproar that some of the voters and/or special interest groups put on the House and Senate . . . K eep it up, but also let them know where you stand on what they can do to cut the deficit. F or example: 1. Do not vote yourself a $35,000 yearly increase (Congressmen Rhodes and U dall) Take a 10 percent decrease and cut your staff 15 percent. 2. You have a budget. I f you overspend your budget, take that, too, out of your salary. Bet you watch the pennies a lot closer. I f I don’t stay on m y budget and can’t pay the light bill, they turn m y electricity off. 3. Collect the $7 billion Egypt owes us, not to mention all of the foreign aid loans, plus interest that is not being paid back from countries that hate our guts but are more than willing to take our money. 4. Elim inate the bureaucratic em pire out o f M edicare paperwork. Forty-five percent of the M edicare budget could be cut by sim plifying the form s for doctor and patient, and still retain the level of care needed. 5. Get serious about w elfare reform concerning illegal aliens. 6. C o llect assets fro m ow ners and department heads of failed Savings & Loans. Also, collect defaulted student loans. 7. Cut grants on projects that do not directly benefit the nation as a whole. 8. Rem em ber that your only job is to work for the benefit of die people as a whole, not just big business or special interest groups. You are supposed to be the lobby for the people! Anne C. Walton Kingman M exico medics Editor:, Working with the medical team sent to Puerto Penasco by Friends Without Borders (S ta te Press, Oct. 15) to perform 15 eye surgeries and see over 40 patients was a powerful emotional experience for everyone concerned: Doctors, nurses and “ go-fers.” Others who w ere not able to make the trip had earlier contributed support in Phoenix. We can alw ays use help on'this side from people willing to translate letters, pick up medical supplies or aid in other tasks as they develop. Going to Mexico, w e can alw ays use m ore transportation and t r a n s la t o r s . O n e p e r s o n t o ld th e organization’s director, Susan Thomas, “ I ’ll be glad to scrub floors, I just want to go.” Anyone interested in more information about Friends Without Borders should contact Susan at 396-2751 or Mike Williams at 952-1491. Mike Williams Graduate Student, Anthropology Page 6 Wednesday, O ctober 17,1990 ______________________ ______ ______________________________________ S la te P l H I Political Union Come Hear an Address by Former Governor BRUCE BABBITT Supporting PROPOSITION 302 H onor e i* ii R igh ts, H e lp A rizo n a Wednesday, October 17, 1990 12:00 to 1:00 p.m. A rizo n a Room Memorial Union Honorable Bruce Babbitt “I have a dream that one day...a desert state sw eltering w ith the heat o f injustice and oppression , w ill be transform ed in to an oasis offre e d o m and justice. ” MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR . SW k Pk m P age? W ed n ttd aj^ ctob w J T jW O W orkers com plain o f hazardous conditions 6 y AM Y PEDO TTO C ontributing W riter Inadequate ventilation, the lack of an exhaust system and insufficient lighting are stifling workers in the Nelson Fine Arts Complex’s backstage production rooms, ASU officials and students said. “ The ventilation is poor in (the rooms), no doubt about it,” said Andy Anderson, a health and s a fety inspector fo r the University. Anderson said sawdust has blown from the scene shop through the air-conditioning ducts into other areas of the building, and paint and glue fumes were detected in the lower levels of of the complex. One small return vent takes air from the costume and craft shops, he said. The costume and craft shops are located two levels below ground in the $16.4 million building. They are used for designing and making costumes and scenery used in theatrical productions. The scene shop is at ground level. Anderson said no code violations have Choking air and poor lighting force occupants o f backstage production rooms to w ork outside been reported, but some activities have been moved outside. Chemicals are used by workers at the shops when props are stripped and painted. Workers and students who use the rooms said spray painting, shoe recoloring and hat sizing must be done outside because the fumes are not adequately drawn from the rooms. They added that many of the materials used in the shops have been thrown away because of the lack of an exhaust system and poor ventilation. “ If they had adequate ventilation — exhaust and air — there would be no problem,” Anderson said. College of Fine Arts Dean Seymour Rosen and Donna Bartz, an associate professor of theater who works in the costume and craft shops, would not comment on the problems. But Jennus Burton, associate v ic e president for business affairs, said it is normal to have post-construction problems in a newer building. He added that ASU has already taken bids to install a separate ventilation system in the ground-level •scene shop to prevent sawdust from being carried throughout the building. The work, he said, should cost $5,000 to $6,000. Burton said whenever a new building is designed and built for ASU, a userrepresentative group is formed. “ A user (generally the dean of the college) will appoint what w e call a userrepresentative group, and that is generally a member from every department who has any space that is being constructed in the facility,” he said. The user group for the Nelson Fine Arts Complex was made up of the director or chairperson o f feach department. D ep artm en t o f D an ce C hairperson Elizabeth Lessard, a user-group member, said the dance faculty spent many hours discu ssin g dance h alls, the d esired ambiance and what types of lounge areas should be available to students. “ Most of the planning was based on the ideal,” Lessard said. “ Adjustments w ere necessary because it was only funded in part.” U s e r group m em b ers s a id budget constraints led to omitting administrative office space, a cutback on dance facilities and the installation of a motorized lift — instead of a hydraulic lift — for the orchestra pit. Lessard said she felt the manner used to collect information from the different departments involved was very good. “ But I felt that the communication could have been better,” she added. “ I would like to be more directly involved with the people 1-800-638-7600. And see how the Pattern of Choosing the Army National Guard as your part-time job may change your life in ways you’ve your life can changejust byjoining the Army National Guard. never even considered. Perhaps you’re going to college, or would like to. You can get tuition assistance through the Montgomery GI Bill. Name___ ■ _________ ___________________________.D M D F If you’re interested in learning things few Address___________________ - , ________ schools can teach-like how to operate state-ofCity_____ ; . • ' _______ .State_______ _______Zip. the-art equipment or how to develop your Hwne NiimW ( ) leadership potential-the Army National Guard U.S. Citizen DYes ONo Date of Birth. can give you aneducation that will pay oft On Soc Sec No.________ _ and off the job. lam: Din High School Din College You’ll also get the opportunity to serve your □H.S. Graduate □ College Graduate Prior Military Service: DYes DNo community and country while you learn and earn Branch a good part-time salary. To find out more about the part-time job with A m e ric a n s A t T h e ir B e s t. full-time benefits return this coupon or call I understand there it no ofakgatm. The inform ation you volun ta rily provide, tndudmg your social security number, w itb e used for recruiting p u p o te t only. Your SSN w g be used to analyze m ponaet. A uthority: KXJSC-5U1 Turn to Fine Arts, page 12, State Press wedn«day^ctob«M 7^1990 Pages N ew ASU transfer office helps MCC students By DIANE SANTORICO State Press The opening of the new ASU transfer office at Mesa Community College — the first one of its kind in Arizona — w ill aid the more than 1,000 students who transfer from the junior institution to the University each year. Lois Meyer, the project’s supervisor, said students who tranfer to ASU w ill be able to receive information to ease the transition to a four-year institution, adding that students need advice on which MCC classes will transfer to ASU. “ I f Philosophy 101 is offered at ASU, for instance, w e want Philosophy 101 from MCC to transfer with a grade of ‘C’ or better,” she said. The program, carrying the theme, “ MCC and ASU Together in Excellence,” began operations Monday. S u sa n C lo u s e , d i r e c t o r o f A S U undergraduate admissions, said the office w ill help students who just do not know where to go for information. “ It reminds m e of when the Student Services Building opened up here,” she said. “ The students w ill be able to find everything they need in one place,” Not only will the office help students with class transfers, it w ill also support disabled students and those who are not always represented, M eyer said. “ W e would like to provide field trips for them and some special support programs,” she said. “ We can take them to the (Student) R ec Center and show them the facilities that they would be able to use.” The office w ill also provide assistance to students who want to transfer back to MCC. “ We w ill Serve as a reverse transfer for those who wish to come back to MCC, so we can help them get back to ASU (later on ),” M eyer said. In addition, the office will offer an exch an ge p ro gra m betw een the two campuses. M eyer said she would like to see the student governments exchange ideas, and MCC organizations and departments travel to ASU for special speakers and events. Howard Greenlee, director of public programs and marketing at MCC, said everyone is very excited about the program. “ We are delighted to have the program fo r students to transfer as painlessly as possible,” he said. “ It is the only center in the state that has a full-time staff person on the campus.” Students can reach the office at 461-7271. G et down to business* . . A dvertise in th e S ta te P ress C lassifieds! ADDICTIONS A program designed to help you recognize, understand and deal w ith a personal addiction o r that o f another. CO-DEPENDENCY October lOdi and SEX ADDICTION both with Dr. Greg Crow, co-author of Lonely AT The Time: Recognizing and Understanding S ex Addiction. FOOD & FITNESS ADDICTION October 24th w it* a special professional panel to discuss issues and answer questions. BEACH CLUB WEST OF SCOTTS D ALE OVERTIME m eets every W ednesday, 7:00pm C ochise Room o f the ASU M em orial Union. Call 894-2201, ext. 219 fo r more Information M n i I 'lix l I YK. ( ornerof HaidenX \iadeVenlur I n N\alivi ShoppingIla/a YK. Cornerof Suulhvrn X McClintock 998*7566 839 *9601) w in A FIESTA BOWL SCHOLARSHIP fo r a collegereligible Arizona Resident* 1st Prize - $3,000 Scholarship 2nd Prize - $2,000 Scholarship 3rd Prize -$ 1 ,0 0 0 Scholarship E ach w e e k th ro u g h o u t th e 19 9 0 fo o tb a ll s e a s o n , w in n e rs w ill b e d ra w n fo r tw o tic k e ts to th e n e x t h o m e g a m e a t e a c h o f A riz o n a ’s th re e u n iv e rs itie s . E n ter w eekly contest o f school o f yo u r choice. W inners o f w eekly drawings w ill also receive a pair of choice seats fo r the FIESTA BOWL Football Game New Year’s Day w here 3 o f the 33 finalists w ill win scholarships. Enter as often as you wish (no purchase necessary). One entry per envelope. Each entry must include the name o f an eligible scholarship recipient* and the nutrition information panel (or facsimile) from any size carton o f milk. PLEASE PRINT NAME, COMPLETE ADDRESS, AND TELEPHONE NUMBER ON PIECE OF PAPER AND INCLUDE W ITH NUTRITION INFORMATION PANEL. 'Scholarship nominee must be an Arizona resident eligible for 1991 term or be currently enrolled at any Arizona College or University. (Employees and family members of Arizona milk producers are not eligible.) Entries must be received by November 20,1990. MAIL EN TR Y TO: “Fiesta Bowl Scholarship Sweepstakes” at one of the following post office boxes. A S U - P.O. Box 520, Tempe, AZ 85280 N A U - P.O. Box 1448, Tempe, AZ 85280 U of A -P .O . Box 560, Tempe, AZ 85280 Sponsored by United Dairymen of Arizona Ü D 8 State Press Page 9 Wednesday, October 17 , 1990 Mideast crisis results in state econom y slump By K R ISTIE YOUNG S tate Press Statistics from ASU’s College of Business indicate the first negative results of the Persian Gulf crisis on the Arizona economy, University officials said. Numbers from the “ Arizona Index of Leading Economic Indicators,” a guide monitoring the future status of Arizona’s economy based on nine financial indicators, have declined recently, according to economists at ASU’s Economic Outlook Center. “ The August number reflects the first impact of the Iraqi invasion and the oil price hikes that followed,” said Tracy Clark, an EOC economist. “ The national economy is slowing down and probably will experience two quarters of negative G N P (Gross National Product) growth.” Clark said the index number, conducted on a monthly basis, is always a few months behind the current status of Arizona's economy. The statistics begin in 1982, which has an index number of 100, he said. Arizona’s August index number of 117.9 is .3 percent lower than the 118.2 measurement for July. Clark said this means the recent economy in Arizona has become slow and sluggish. “ This is the first month w e have incorporated figures from the Iraqi invasion into the index,” Clark said. “ These figures show the reaction to the invasion (from July to August). “ I would not be surprised if the index continued to decline over the next couple of months.” In general, when the index increases, it means Arizona’s economy is improving, Clark said, adding that if the index stays flat, the economy w ill continue with no changes. The index is based on nine indicators, combined and weighted to project the pace of economic activity several months ahead. “ Certain things that happen now are a good indication of what w ill happen in the future,” Clark said. Maricopa County building permits, sensitive materials prices and delivery times reflect positively on the outcome of the index, while negative influences include money supply, hours worked in manufacturing, new orders, production, inventoriés and employment indicators. Clark said the Iraqi invasion had some effect on the index number. THE1990W ORLDRETURK In recent months, the index has been flat, indicating no change. But Clark said the index did decrease from July to August due to the nation’ s reaction to the crisis in the Middle East. Clark said Arizona’s economy has been fairly slow and “ w ill probably stay slow fo r some tim e.” “ W e are likely to see more slowing of Arizona’s growth (in the future).” Dr. Harold Fearon, director of ASU’s Center for Advanced Purchasing Studies and contributer to the index, said that while the Middle East crisis was probably a negative influence on the index, Arizona’s economy was on the downslide before the invasion of Iraq. Arizona’s August 1988 index number was 120.7 — 2.8 percent higher than the August 1990 number, according to .the EOC report. “ There doesn’ t seem to be much question that the growth rate is being affected by something,” said Fearon, a professor emeritus of purchasing studies at ASU. “ But you can argue that the economy was losing steam before that.” H obart Row land contributed to this rep ort. Sponsor: ChrW Isn Student» PoUowsWp T tw S o e p e to fJ o h n Piace am n Hamortal Unk» BtAang u m i of 'M tn io U Y o fP a W o r« " T M * IM iM m lM P U ra d io b m M ta o M o n t p iii KHEP I t M OH Fall Semester ■ The Gospel of John, Part I (Chapters 1-13) Subject Chapter Set Free From the Power of Sin 8 The Reason for Spiritual .Blindness_______9 Date Oct. 18 Oct. 25 ■ D cm S ta d M U M . 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Good until 12/15/90 J Page 10 Wednesday, O ctober 17,1990 State Press Ex-hostage in Beirut Speech to produce to speak o n captivity high student turnout By JENNIFER FRANKLIN S tate Press A form er U. S. hostage in the Middle East, who was released in April after 44 months of captivity, w ill detail today what it was like to be blindfolded, beaten and fed arsenic. In a 7 p.m. Associated Students of ASU Lecture Series-sponsored lecture in the MU Arizona Room, Frank Reed w ill speak about being held hostage in ¡Beirut by a Moslem group called the Organization of thé Islamic Dawn. While in captivity, Reed reported being kept blindfolded in a cell, fed arsenic to keep him weak and beaten severely for trying to escape twice. In an interview with Tim e magazine in August, Reed, 57, described what his guards did to him when he tried to escape. “ They beat my bare feet with an iron rod, b a s h e d m y n o s e a n d j a w , ” th e Massachusetts native said. “ I lost half the hearing in my right ear. They attached live wires to my fingers. Two days later, a couple of sadistic guards beat me again, banged m y feet and face.” Reed said being isolated for as long as 13 months at a tim e was worse than the beatings. “ M y defenses really began to weaken,” he said in the magazine article. “ Nothing I did mattered to anyone. For the first time, I began to fear dying alone in this awful place, with no trace of personal concern.” Reed left his job as a school principal New H a m p s h ir e to b e c o m e d ir e c t o r o f e le m e n t a r y e d u c a tio n a t B e ir u t ’ s International Collège in 1577. He later founded the private Lebanese International School. Reed converted to Islam while in Beirut and married his w ife, a Syrian Moslem. Since his release, Reed has said it will be one of his priorities to keep the stillimprisoned American hostages in the public mind. He is now conducting a lecture tour, in which he speaks to various campus populations and organizations, said Chris Kieselbach, director of the ASASU Lecture Series. ; “ He w ill talk about his experiences since being freed as w ell as those he had as a hostage,” Kieselbach said, adding that R eed’s lecture is timely because he was released only six months ago. By PATRICIA MAH S tate Press An Associated Students of ASU Official said he expects a high turnout fo r fo r m e r A rizon a G ov. B ruce Babbitt’s speech today, in which he will attempt to sell students on Proposition 302. . •B Proposition 3Ò2 is passed in the Nov. 6 election, it would establish a paid Martin Luther King Jr. holiday while keeping the state’s Columbus Day holiday. The noon speech in the MU Arizona Room is being sponsored by the ASASU Political Union. Carlos G alin do-E lvira, assistant director of the Political Union, said he anticipates a turnout of at least 300 people. “ We anticipate the event w ill inform, and educate and m otivate,” he said. “ (It w ill) inform them (students) of the issue and motivate them to vote.” Chuck Coughlin, spokesperson for the M L K Better Am erica Committee, a ca m p a ign to fu rth er support o f Proposition 302, said he expects Babbitt to talk about his economic and moral endorsement of the M LK ballot item. “ It is proper to honor Dr. K ing’s c o n t r i b u t i o n th e c i v i l r i g h t s movement,” he said, addihg that he expects Babbitt to field questions from the audience. Galindo-Elvira agreed. “ His presence lends continuity to establish the King holiday,” he said. Proposition 301 is also on the Nov. 6 ballot and would replace a paid Columbus D ay with a paid King holiday. I f v o te r s v o te “ n o ” on both propositions, there will be no paid King holiday. In September 1989, the Legislature voted to establish a King holiday in place of Columbus Day. But, this spring lawmakers repealed die law and voted to establish a King holiday in addition to Columbus Day. But petitioners moved to let the people decide and placed the entire m atter on the Nov. 6 ballot. B I C Y C L E S A F E T Y -I '-sh £' I t DID YOU KNOW THAT... * In 82% of all bicyclist accidents in Tempe, the rider is injured or killed. . Wearing a helmet w ill reduce your chance of a serious head injury by 85%, and is much cheaper than a trip to the hospital. • The majority of bicycle-car accidents occur at intersections and in 65% of the acci dents, the hike rider was at fault. V 31 % of bicycle accidents are caused hecauee the t^ y c lis t did not ride with the -■yfrSfflfek • ySBÊÊÈi; AVCMOpfeiNG CITED ... • A ll bicycle or pedestrian citations w ill cost you $4 0 o r more. • On sidewalks and streets always ride w ith the tra ffic flo w , not against it. • Obey all traffic control signs and signals. • At night, ride w ith a w hite light on the front of your bike and a red rear reflector on the back of your hjkik V— M NOON is the deadline ALSO • Yield to traffic when you enter crosswalks. • S low down when approaching busy intersections, I • D o n o t assume you are safe because you have the right-of-way in a car-bike collision, the bicyclist always loses. MAKE IT A SAFE SCHOOL YEAR Follow the traffic laws. Failure to do so can cost you more than a ticket It can cost you your life! I C ity of Tem pe B icycle A dvisory Com m ittee to get a StatePress classified ad Inthe following day. Don't miss it. Page 11 Wednesday, October 17,1990 State Press T H E BEST FB O M T H E B E S T IN TE S T P B E P. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD. IS THE BIGGEST AND BEST TEST PREP ORGANIZATION IN THE WORLD. COURSES IN: SSAT, PSAT. GMAT, GRE, GRE PSYCH, LSAT, INTRO TO LAW SCHOOL, BAR REVIEW, MCAT, DAT, TOEFL, NATIONAL MEDICAL BOARDS, MSKP, FMGMS, FLEX, NCLEX-RN, CGFNS, NATIONAL DENTAL BOARDS, CPA, NTE, SPEED READING, AND MORE. m m g ift a t m * o* « h o Ur m * . w h ile s u p p S w k n t. 967-2967 INTERESTED IN PHARMACY? Become an important and respected member o f health care teams. The University o f Arizona College o f Pharmacy Pharm.D. Program Tuition_________ Continued fro m page 1. The ASASU president said he will be meeting with Coor before the COP phone Conference Thursday morning. Ortega added that while the COP was “ cutting it down to the w ire," he was riot surprised that they would need more time to perfect a proposal. ASASU State Relations Director Rob M iller said he was confident, but nervous, about the impending process. “ I'm really confident right now in the process.” he said. M iller said Coor has shown he is a student advocate. “ If Lattie Coor had the power to say ‘This is what w e’re going to do,’ then w e’d all be very happy,” M iller said. “ W e’ll just have to w ait and see just what the consensus of the COP is aS far as compromises. “ I ’m just holding my breath.” Ethics________ __ Continued fro m page 1. defended the bill. “ I ’m saying ‘just in case,’ because I like insurance policies.” Although he does not expect ASASU to use the committee, Pontes said claims of unethical acts last year influenced the authors to propose the bill. “ I ’m not going to be Specific because it really doesn’t matter,” he said, “ now that we can start looking at specific cases, starting if arid when this gets through.” Liberal Arts Sen. G ary Starikoff, chairman of the government operations committee, voted against the bill, saying it could lead to “ m orality police” and bog ASASU down with pettiness. “ Ethics is a very touchy subject,” he said. “ One thing the Associated Students does not need is to become more political. “ I don’t think this would ever be used anyway.” will be on campus Thursday, Oct. 11, 1990 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. in Social Sciences Bldg:, Room 101 ^ “ We are all doing as much as possible to make sure every student is getting the best deal possible.” Y o u c a n starikoff« who expects fierce debate on the issue Tuesday, added that investigating the behavior of ASASU members is the job of college councils, riot fellow senators. Sen. Tim Berry from the College of Public Program s feared an ethics committee investigation could draw unnecessary media attention to accused senators. “ I ’m looking on the lines of people’s reputations — people’s integrity,” he said. “ This is just something you don’t play with because that could really hurt somebody. “ I don’t like watchdog committees. W e shouldn’t have to look over each other’s shoulders,” Although Berry expressed reservations about the bill, he said it was worthy enough to face the Senate for a vote. Michplle Woods, a College of Nursing senator, agreed, adding that she had m ixed feelings on the issue. “ You can’t make rules about ethics,” Woods said. “ There’s just no w ay.” c h a r g e F IN D O U T A B O U T : - ...... C a r e e r o p p o r t u n i t i e s , M a s te rC a rd y o u r c la s s if ie d a d ^ v 3 a a d m is s io n r e q u ir e m e n t s , ), - 1 | \ / PC A T. A d v is in g a va ila b le to a ll .. ■ ■ ■ : : i nt er est ed stu d e n ts. o v e r STATE PRESS CLA SSIFIEDS The MUAB Gossip Reliable Sources Since Sept. 1990 9 t h e 6 5 * 6 p h o n e ! 7 3 1 STATE PIFIESS CLASSIFIEDS COLLEGE I.D . NIGHT 2 FOR 1 ENTREES E LV IS Sighted on ASU Campus 1. Oakland A’s 2. Cincinnati Reds 3. Eight Color TV’s Just three reasons why you should be at Old Chicago tonight for College I.D. Night. It’s simple —■ two for one entrees with your college or faculty I.D. every single Wednesday. „__ Actual Photo Taken The Far-Out Fifties return! MUAB’s Special Events Committee to host 50’s day follies October 17, 1990. Calendar o f Events includes: •W a tc h those w acky episodes of “ T h e H oneym ooners” and other 5 0 ’s video from 9 :4 0 to 1 1 :30 and 1:40-3:00 in the M U P rogram m ing Lounge •C o m e see and hear th e K O O L O ldies M achine roll out your favorite oldies from 10 to 3 on C ady Mall •R o c k with a live 5 0 ‘s band— Bits and Pieces— from 1 1 :40 to 1:30 in th e M U Lounge • S e e th e m ovie that celeb rated th e 5 0 ’s— G rease! F ree in th e MU C in em a at 4 p.m . rTTIT-'T^ W a tch f o r E lv is ! U p A fe b OLD CH-IG4GO. After 5 p.m. P is » Not Indu* 5 Block» W w t of Bill/530 W . B roadw ay/T«» 921-9431 i Page 12 State Press Wednesday, O ctober 17,1990 Fine Arts Continued fro m p a g e 7 . planning.” Department of Theater Chairperson Lin Wright, also a user-group member, said she tries to keep the faculty as involved as possible in the planning. Wright said her department is discussing alternative areas where the chemicals needed for the shops could be used. Wright also said she sympathizes with w orkers’ and students’ complaints of inadequate lighting in the costume shop. “ The lighting is not what w e had in mind,” Wright said. “ It is a priority.” ; Vicki Riske, a form er craftsperson in the theater, said she quit her job in the building “ If you are caught down there (when the lights go out) it is pretty dark because it is two floors down,” she Said. Anderson said there is an emergency system that should provide electricity when the power goes out. “ W e don’t have scheduled tests of lights,” he said adding that the fire marshal regularly checks the sprinkler systems and fir e a la rm s co n s id e re d ‘ ‘ life - s a fe ty G REAT FO R STUDENTS SPANISH• FRENCH GERMAN• ITALIAN• JAPANESE Workers said problems also exist with the overall lighting in the costume shop. Although track lighting was installed when the building was constructed two years ago, workers claim stronger lights that provide full illumination are necessary. To compensate for the poor lighting, temporary fluorescent lights hang above the several large fabric tables used in the room. Officials said as long as there are no bare wires or overloaded circuits, the temporary lighting is not a code violation. It’s as easy as MAXIMUM VOCABULARY / FREE BROCHURE PLEASE WRITE Ititim in hturn nnc innova with sewing equipment. “ The most people I have seen down there at one time is 15,” McKnight said. COLLEGE NIGHT at the LAN G U AG E TR AN SLATO R S ■quality O u n fitii systems.” ASU junior Barbara McKnight, a theater m ajor who has a classroom lab in the costume shop, said she cannot understand why the lights have not been tested. “ To know that glow tape and flashlights have to be on the corner of every table I can understand as a precaution —- but not as necessity,” she said. “ If someone was being fitted for a costume that was elaborate in any way, it is hard to imagine them being able to m aneuver through the tight walkways and out of the room in the dark.” The costume shop has four large fabric tables, more than 10 mannequins, six sewing machines and several other desks partly because of the safety hazards in the shops. Riske said she has been down in the windowless costume shop when the lights went out and the safety lights did not work. 1501 s Clin,0n st- * Box 12408 Ft Wayne IN 46863-2408 Dept. ASU ANYTHING!! TfCut- Cuervo, Jäger, Long Island Ice Teas, Jack, Schnapps, Margaritas, etc...—Anything! 4 B U Y 1 T A N N IN G S E S S IO N A T $ 5 A N D GET 2n d S ES S IO N FREE (NEW CUSTOMERS ONLY) N EW (BULBS! 8 9 4 -5 5 7 0 WOLFF 1 1 2 6 N. Scottsdale Rd., # 3 (Drug Emporium Plaza) ►sc\ OPEN EVERY DAY |_OTHER DISCOUNTS W /VA LID A TE? ASULD, r 1 $2.00 Off i i V a lv o lin e L u b e, O ïl & F ilte r S e rv ic e i i 1355 S. McClintock T em pe, 894-27S 8 i I ■ G o o d o n ly w ith c o u p o n . N o t v a lid w ith I a n y o th e r o ffe r I I I V I VALVOLINE People who know use Valvoline! L. Coors & Coors Lite I G rease 'n G o’s i Pitchen Exp. 12-31-90 Cover R eg. « Price ! *1 9 .9 5 I ______ I R O C K Y ’S BBQ Chicken, Ribs and B u ffalo Wings Û ' T O N IG H T rain convertion 1 X12 E. Apache B ird., Tempe, Arizona RAIN CONVENTION (N orth ea st C orn er o f A p a ch e 8* T e rra ce ) C O M IN G SO O N , Ritual 9 8 7 -8 8 3 5 B U Y 1 LUNGIg OB D INNER & GET A 2ND OF EQUAL OR LESSER VA LU E FOR HALF PRICE!! TRY ONE OF OUR NEW LIGHT LUNCHES OR SPECIALS 1 N ♦ UNIVERSITY A.S.U. Q oc V- DC 5 DC £ (Q DC 8 * ■ 5? o P" • z Q o BROADWAY Happy Hour . 4 to 8 p.m. -I8d W ings 12.00 Pitchers Thursday Night LADIES WIN $ 5 0 ,0 0 0 ! $1,000 in giveaways, Atomic Fusion Thursdays! Big Screen TV No Expiration Date (Coupon not good with other offers.) 1320 E. Broadway Tempe, Arizona 829-7777 W e l l B b e tyo tir w o rld ! State Press Page 13 Wednesday, October 17,1990 APS requests p erm issio n fo r rate increase P H O E N IX (A P ) — Arizona Public Service Co. officials made their pitch to the Corporation Commission for a 9.3 percent rate increase Tuesday, promising not to ask for another hike before 1995 if the current request is granted. “ W e’re willing to trade earnings for an early settlement of this rate case,” said Mark DeMichele. APS chief executive officer. “ And if w e are able to do that, the customer will benefit tremendously.” The utility is asking the commission to take the unprecedented step of approving the rate hike without extensive testimony or public hearings. In exchange, APS says it will not ask for another rate request before 1995, unless there is an increase in federal, state or local taxes, or in the event of an increase of at least 10 percent in the cost of fuel or purchased power. The utility filed a 26.1 percent rate-increase request last January, and cut it to 21.5 percent in May. The new request is for an across-the-board 5.9 percent increase effective Jan. 1, plus an additional 4.3 percent for higher property taxes the utility says it will have to pay next year. The company outlined three m ajor factors that it said enabled it to cut the request: •The sale of Unit 4 of the Cholla power plant near Holbrook to PacifiCorp for $220 million and related power-sharing agreements with the Oregon-based utility. •A restructuring of APS that resulted in the elimination of 1,025 positions. •A $250 million write-off of a portion o f the cost of building the Palo Verde nuclear plant, which w ill be absorbed by stockholders in APS and its parent company, Pinnacle West Capital Corp. : „ The APS proposal stipulates that it w ill be withdrawn if no agreement is reached on rates by Nov. 19, but DeMichele told the commission that it “ isn’t a take it or leave it offer.” DeMichele added, however, that if the new rates are not in place by Jan. 1, “ then there are several things we can’t voluntarily agree to,” such as the rate freeze or the $250 million write-off. Commission Chairman Marcia Weeks made no promises, but gave all parties in the case, as well as the public, until Nov. 2 to submit written comments. “ We are very encouraged to see a reduction in your request,” she said. “ But 9.3 percent still is a very large increase that must be fully justified.” Ms. Weeks also said that before she would approve a negotiated settlement, the utility would have to ensure that it would not ask for another hike before 1995, even to make up for higher taxes or fuel costs. I f a negotiated settlement is not reached, the request will be subjected to the normal rate-making procedure. Jon Poston, a commission spokesman, said the first formal hearing would not be held before February. I f there is a negotiated settlement, Poston said it would not be approved without public hearings. “ Even if the staff recommends a settlement, there always w ill be an opportunity for public input,” Poston said. There was some public comment at Tuesday’s meeting. Representatives o f the Holbrook and Parker chambers of commerce endorsed the proposal, saying the four-year rate freeze would stabilize utility rates and aid economicdevelopment activities. MCC carrying around emotional reminders ot the fight, adding that he becomes skittish and nervous around large crowds and has become less social. “ I went from being an extrovert to being an introvert,” he said. “ I had a lot of problems afterwards. A lot of things didn’t click for m e.” Springer dropped out o f ASU after the incident and is currently enrolled at Scottsdale Community College, where he said seeing the chalkboard is easier and oneon-one relationships with instructors are common. The fight has also taken its toll on Springer’s family. “ I wish there was a way to get quick justice,” said his father, Rob Springer. Mr. Springer said he has been dominated by two sets of emotions about his eldest son’s injuries. “ I have concern for Matthew and I have strong feelings about the justice system,” he said, adding that he remains cautious Continued fro m page 1. Springer was taken to Tem pe St. Luke’s Medical Center by two fraternity members and later transferred to Desert Samaritan Hospital in Mesa. Springer, who suffered a fractured skull, eye injuries, including retinal damage and broken cheekbones, underwent 3% hours of surgery two nights later. A t the time, doctors w ere still unsure if he would fully recover. Since his hospital stay, Springer said he has seen his doctor about six' times for follow-up treatments, adding that he has a permanent scar between his eyes and is expected to get steel plates removed from hiS skull sometime this month. “ I ’m not angry anymore,” he said. “ I ’d just like it to be over. But I am a little let down. : "1 think about it sometimes. I still get recognized as ‘that guy.’ ” Aside from the physical scars plastic surgery can erase. Springer said he is still about the outcome of the misdemeanor charges. “ I just hope som ething happens,” Mr. Springer said. Delta Chi fraternity members said they are relieved the incident m ay soon be wrapped up through the justice system. Darrel Gustavel, a Delta Chi member, said he is relieved by the charges and hopes justice prevails. “ I hoped all along something would come of it,” Gustavel said of the charges. “ It’s about time. W e’ve kind of been playing a wait-and-see type of gam e.” floor, throwing a rioter off the second-floor balcony and slamming his apartment door : on another person’s wrist. Fraternity members recall the riot as if it happened last weekend, haunted by reminders everytim e they open new doors and see plaster spots on the walls. Attitudes on the part of fraternity members have changed since the riot. Many of the members can still recount the spots they w ere standing in and the incident’s bizarre scenarios. Eric Thieroff said he remembers fighting his way up to his apartment on the second Thieroff said he then locked himself in his bedroom and loaded his .45 automatic gun still in his room from a recent hunting trip with his father. “ The fact that I had to draw a loaded weapon to defend m yself is unbelievable,” he said, adding that he had no intention of using the firearm . Thieroff also was injured in the fight after he was punched in the face by an unidentified male. “ We let people go through our parking lot (now), and w e stay inside,” Thieroff said. “ When people park here we just tell them it’s private parking and then go inside. We don’t have confrontations anymore. “ We even let them use our phone when we have their cars towed.” $4.00 PIZZAS! Get up to four 12” Medium two-item pizzas for only $4.00 each with the purchase of a 1 4 ” LA R G E P E P P E R O N I PIZZA FEA ST (or any two-items of your choice) at the special price of c r iie n c fttmiLY HdIR CUTTERS O N L Y $ 7.99! O u r P e p p e ro n i Feast fea tu rin g e x tra p e p p e ro n i and e x tra c h e e s e is back at an in c re d ib le p r ic e ! Order a 14 ’’Large Pepperoni Pizza Feast o r any Large Two-Item Pizza fo r o n ly $7.99 and g e t u p t o fo u r m o re 12” M ed iu m Pan o r O rig in a l Pizzas o f equ al o r lesser valu e fo r o n ly $4.00 EACH ! N o t valid w ith any o th e r c o u p o n s o r offers. L im ite d tim e only. Subject to all a p p lica b le state and lo c a l tax. SERVING ASU SINCE 1980 HOURS: ll:0 0 a m - l:3 0 a m Sun .-Th u rs. ll:0 0 a m - 2 :3 0 a m Fri.-Sat. f ONLY ■ $3.00! 9 6 8 -5 5 5 5 A University and Rural "¡"O NLY $3.50! Designer Perm Special O NLY $4.00! w/coupon ■ O N L Y $3.00 f ° r an additional ■ if OPl.Y $3.50 for an additional Iq n LY $4.00 lo r an additional ■ bmali pizza with the purchase of a Medi[turn pizza with the purchase T a rg e pizza with the purchase o f I another Small pizza o f equal or I o f another an Medium pizza o f equal another Large pizza o f equal or lesser value. N o limit. N o epu or lesser value N o limit. N o lesser value. N o limit. N o cou pon necessary, A t this location I coupon necessary. At this locan pon necessary. A t this location only. I tion only. only. Shampoo I m Not v a lid w itt any o tte r coupons or ori*« Subjact to a ll a p p ica b l* atoto and lo c d li I I I I HI El N ot vtoM w ith a m ro tia r coupon* or oftam . a NotvatW wM h any otw rooupona or o fte n . Subjectto a t apptoato* alato and local tax. S2 [S u b je c t to d ia p p io a b la a to to and local tea w /coupon Reg. $29“ Sham poo, C u t & S tyle Included Long H air S lig h tly H igher t t a n y ___ „ ____ Subject to a t apparato* alato and local fa Not va lid «mitt any o Subject to a t a p fa ci r ___ 4 ? lo r an Original q lium liuih three-item piz: pizza and Small three-item pizza ana one two Diet o r Classic Cpkes. Ehet ò r Classic Coke. ■ One coupon per pizza. One coupon per pizza. I Expires 11 -15-90 Expires 11-15-90 ■ w/the $6.95 CUT No A p po intm en t N ecessary Ever! B ring T h e W hole Fam ily! ! D E V IL ’S ! SPARKY’S SUNDEVIL I SPECIAL D E L IG H T Ï N L Ï $5.49 for an Original I _ I ■ P e r f e c t C u t E v e r y T im e O N L Y S I 1.49 for an Original Large Sun-Devil Special o r any three-item pizza an d a 6-pack o f Diet or Classic Coke. ■ pàònciYienc r I” FdlTlILYHOIR(UTTERS ( jc M e n c Fdm iLY HOIR (UTTERS One coupon per pizza. Expires 11-15-90 a N ot vatM wUh any o ftia r coupon* oc o fte n . m 7 7 Ì Subject to a t appScato* alato and local tax 9 5 # O ur d rive r* carry laaa than $30 00 Umta d datvary area* to jn a u ro aatofr . Our drive r* are near penatoad to r la to S alvarla*. 01990 D om ino'* P izza, toe. U n iv e rs ity & R u ra l R d. C o rn e rs to n e S h o p p in g C e n te r 968-8008 Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9-9 • Sat. 9-7 • Sun. 12-5 Page 14 State Press Wednesday, October 17,1990 Extracurricular. M erri Lynn Travis Sophomore, Exercise Science Corw in Townsend Senior, Communications "/ think that we're going to do "Racquetball is a great sport to play at the Rec Complex. All my friends hang-out here and playing here give me the chance to relax between my classes." really well in Intramural Flag Football this year. I play for my sorority because it's a great way for me to do things with my sisters and stay in shape. i i i i i i i SU N D EVIL SPECIAL! O N L Y $ 11.49 fo r an O rigin a l Large Sun D evil Special O R three-item p izza and a six-pack o f C oke. O n e co u p on per pizza. Expires: 12/31/90 V a lid at this location only. i i i i i i u □ ■ ) Ò DOM PIZZ1 r i O PE N FOR LU N C H 968-5555 ® Rural & Broadway Not valid with any other coupons or offers. Subject to all applicable state and local tax. SRC Page 15 State Press Clip & Save. ? i i i i A q u a tic W e e k ly S ch ed u le O u td o o r November 9 - 12 November 23 R ecreation A d ven tu re Grand Canyon Back Country Trip Price: $ 90.00 - Nogales Family Trip Price: M onday, •Water Exercise Mona Plumer (M .P .)l 1:30-12:30 p.m. •Water Aerobics 1:00-2:00 p m. , 5:30-6:30 p m. SRC •Physically Challenged 2:00-5:00 p.m. •Lifeguard Training (L O T ) 4:00-6:00 p.m. •Water Safety instructor (W S I) 6:00-10:00 p.m. •Emergency Water Safety (E W S ) 6:00-8:00 p.m. •Open Water SCU BA (OW)5:15. -r8:30 p.m. Mona Plummer T rip s $14.00 m V in December 14 - 16 - Sunrise Family Ski Trip Price: $260.00 Tuesday, •L G T 6:00-8:00 p.m •Physically- Challenged 2:00-5:00 p.m. W edn esday, •WSI Update 6:00-10:00 p.m. •LG T 4:00-6:00 p m. ; ..•LGT Bridge d:0O'-8:O0 p.m. :: •Physically; Challenged 2;00-5:00 p.m.. •GW . 5:15 -8:30 Mona Plummer S II C h ild Ten i i i i i i • . '¡ V A & ■ Eyery Friday - Parents Night-In October 27 - Sun Devil Saturday * Idren’s Special Évent * $4.00 per-¿fiild tume Party. - Children’s Special Évent October. 28 - Halloween Costume 00pm Sunday - 1:00pnt - 3:00pm Price:/ $4.00 per child. November .3 child Thursday, •EGT 6:00-8:00 p.m. •Physically Challenged 2:00-5:00 p.m. ; -Dive Mater SCUBA SRC 6:00-8:30 p.m. ill ¡ I Friday;, •EMS 4:00-6:00 p.m. •Lifeguard In-Service Training 4:00-5:00 p.m. •Physically Challenged 2:00-5:00 p.m. •Family Swim Night 6:00-10:00 p.m.« Sun Devil Saturday - Children’s Special Évent - $4.00 per m November IS - Arizona; .Sluseum for Youth - Children's Special Event Price: $13.00 December .9. - Winter Holiday Party Price: $4:O0 per child. , . fttl Children;* Special Évent h Saturday,; : •October 21 Octoberfest 2-10 p.m. W im ’ w W II Additional • /' ' questions? Contact Carolyn Mayberry or Cari Marr. F o r Y o u r In fo r m a t io n :Í;Í;Í;§§;Í;§;Íí§;§££;S;Í;Í;»*Í*Í*^ PH YSIC ALLY CHALLENGED IN T R A M U R A L S P O R T S S A T U R D A Y O C T . 20 - T A B L E T E N N I S T O U R N E Y -1 :0 0 p m to 4 :0 0 p m at S m a ll G y m S A T U R D A Y N O V 17 -O N E - U P - O N E D O W N T O U R N E Y -1 :0 0 p m to 4 :0 0 p m at E a st T e n n is C o u r t #5 Aerobics, weight training, tennis, and racquetball, and Timex Fitness Week Entries V olleyball Dbls. Accepted Plav Begins D ivisions Oct. 1:5-23 Oct 26 CR 5-K Run Oct. 29-Nov. 6 N ov. 15 M .W W re s tlin g N ov. 5-13 N ov. 19. 20 M gàggi wM mmm Monday, October 1 - Fitness programs “ Session II” registration begins. — Aerobics, W eight Training, Tennis & Racquetball. — N ew schedules available at the SRC by Monday, Oct. 15th. Sunday, October 21-Thursday, October 25 - Timex Fitness W eek. — Sunday, 10/21 • Domino’s Octoberfest Pool Party. — Tuesday, 10/23 - 2nd Annual Stationary Triathlon. — A ll participants will receive a LifeFitness Lifecircuit T-shirt. — Awards given to the top three overall (m/f)— Thursday, 10/25 — W orld’s Largest Aerobics Class. — 4-6 p.m. in the SRC Red Gym. — Fitness tips and free prizes to be raffled! Every Monday Friday 3:00 & 4:00 p.m. Step Aerobics!!. -—What is it? Find out at the SRC. --Enough steps for 30 people a class. Sport « Membership info. FACULTY/STAFF PRO RATED SRC M EM BERSH IPS SjSvK •Ä*AW WÈ-. •*2••••••••• •••••••♦••I*" ■ ■ H ASU faculty and staff (50% FTE and above) may purchase a prorated Student Recreation Complex membership for $25 beginning Monday, October 15. The membership is valid from October 21,1990-January 13, 1991, and may be purchased at the Cashier’s Office, or at the SRC (8 a.m.-lO p.m ). œ *£•£&? W •XvXv Mg: wm M mm Xw!; wÄw •W :•:W •:•W »:• >£>£•& ÊÊ Mjg ip •gxjig: m ¡1 ; ÉÉ Important SRC Phone Numbers Recorded Message 965-5638 •General Information Intramural Sports 965-8945 •Daily schedule/weather cancellations •Intramural events & dates Racquetball Reservations 965-8550 Building/Pool Hours and Information 965-2626 Additional questions? Call 965-8900. Page 16 State Press Wednesday, October 17,1990 Police Report ASU police reported the following incidents Tuesday: •An intoxicated man was found lying on the grass on the north side of the Old Main Building. ASU police warned him of trespassing and loitering. •A laser printer, valued at $550, is missing from the College of Architecture and Environmental Design. •An ASU employee reported that someone stole his bank card and used it to rem ove $1,300 from his bank account. •A University student reported his wallet stolen after he left it on a table at the Dash Inn, 731 E. Apache Blvd. He claims checks, valued at $18, have been written since the theft. •Several items belonging to an ASU student were stolen from a locker in the men’s gym at the Student Recreation Complex. The loss is estimated at $249. •An ASU student was arrested, cited and released for. possession of a fictitious driver’s license at 900 E. University Drive. •An-ASU employee reported that $120 in cash was removed from her desk in the Language and Literature Building. •Another University employee was treated for injuries sustained after falling off a ladder while working on an a ir conditioner in the Engineering Research Center. She was later transported to Tempe St. Lukes Medical Center, •An ASU student reported that $150 in cash was removed from his room at 714 Alpha Drive. Tempe police reported the following incidents Tuesday: •A 39-year-old man was arrested for allegedly destroying flowering plants at Centerpoint, 680 S. M ill Ave. He told police that he was digging them up “ because they w ere dry, and no one else was helping them.” •A man was arrested and charged with driving under the Influence of alcohol in connection with a hit-and-run accident at 48th Street and Southern Avenue. •A 9-year-old girl was sexually assaulted while walking through a park at 2150 E. Orange St. A man tried to take her violin and then grabbed her chest. The girl ran away to escape. The suspect is a 20- to 30-year-old Hispanic m ale of medium build, with dark hair and two earrings in his right ear. He was last seen wearing a brown shirt with holes, brown shorts and White high-top tennis shoes. Com piled by State P ress re p o rte r Teena Chadwell. Medicare C o n tin u ed fro m page 3 . : >'■ Before prospective pricing, the government paid whatever costs Medicare patients ran up while hospitalized. The new system has slowed the upward spiral of the cost of Medicare, which covers Americans over age 65. But it has raised fears that care would be compromised through shortened hospital stays and the substitution of cheaper services and procédures. A 19-member R AN D research team compared 1981-82 patient records — before prospective pricing — to 1985-86 records — after prospective pricing — at 297 hospitals. The researchers found discharges were quicker — the mean length of stay dropped from 14.4 days to 11.0 days, a difference of 3.4 days! But thé death rate overall also dropped, from 16.5 percent Don’t blow r I I I I i P E A “ H E “ to 15.7 percent, in the 30 days after hospital discharge for patients with any of the five conditions studied. They were congestive heart failure, heart attack, pneumonia, stroke or hip fracture. Under thé new pricing system, there also was a slight decline in the number of patients dead by 180 days, but the figure would have declined even further had it not been for deaths due to instability and other problems at discharge, researchers said. The., researchers also reported that the proportion of patients receiving poor or very poor care declined from 25 percent to 12 percent but ‘ ‘remained a worrisome issue. ” The study is the most comprehensive yet evaluating the im pact of prospective pricing on the quality of care, other, researchers said.: A ' -: N A l” S A rO But Bruce Vladeck, president of the United Hospital Fund of New York and a member of the Prospective Paym ent Assessment Commission, a congressional agency that evaluates Medicare pricing, said he was “ not terribly surprised” at the findings. “ Other, less Sophisticated efforts to try to measure the quality effects of the system have produced sim ilar results, ” Vladeck said in a telephone interview. He added that the findings w ere nonetheless “ reassuring.” Charles Dougherty, director of the Center for Health Policy and Ethics at Creighton University, said that even though “ there is some real good news here,” the increase in discharges .of patients in unstable medical condition is disturbing. 1 N 3 1 4 N . R o b s o r i S t. Anheuser-Busch is P ro u d to N o w th ru N o v .. 30 ... $2 5 .OO F U L IfS E T S ! Be a P a rt o f N ation al Collegiate $ 5 .0 0 OFF F IL LS MUST BRING COUPON! • Sculptured Nails • Fiberglass Nails • • Hawaiian Manicures • I A S K F O R T IS H o r K A R E N 8 9 0 -9 4 0 8 W e’r e looking fo r your best ‘ ideas for the Second Annual “ K n ow W h en Tb Say W h en ’ Poster Competition. NOON isthe DEADLINE tohavea StatePress Classified linerinthe nextday. S ta te P re s s C la ssifie d s M atthew s C en ter Room 15 965-6731 B 7pm-ciose 25 C Drafts $2 Pitchers 50 < Pint Drafts ^ 0 7 pm-Close $150 Long Islands $1 Margs 1 7Pm-ciose 25 C Drafts $2 Pitchers $ l 50 Long Islands $1 Margs ^ SIng along with Karaoke 7pm-Close G 7 pm-Close $1 Shooter Specials L IV E M U S IC 25< Drafts $2 Pitchers t i l g 1 ” V ^ 9 9 This competition is being held, in conjunction with National Collegiate Alcohol Awareness Week. 5 pm-Close W Ê Ê S H R IM P ; A share of the $20,000 In scholarship money may be waiting for you! ; •Grand Prize Scholarship for “ Best Concept” —$5000 •Five (5) Runner-Up Scholarships—! 1,000 We are looking for the best poster concepts that •Twenty (20) Third Place Scholarships— $500 express the need for personal responsibility in the Scholarships are underwritten by Anheuser Busch. consumption o f alcohol. Drawing ability will not Contest ends November 30, 1990, be a factor in determining the winning concepts. ¡È n f College\ Rural & Apache 1 &q j _ Tempe For entry forms, write to: Poster Competition, c/o BSK, 1000 G eyer Ave., St. Louis, M O 63104 College Culture Stale Press Wednesday, O ctober 17,1990 Page 17 PNHEAD .;.v.v Allure of the silver ball By KRAMER W ETZEL S tate Press “ Ohh, try m e again,” seductively coos the machine. F or a collection of plastic, wires and glass, she’s rather enticing, in a sexist way. Xenon is her name, and she is the nemesis of many a m ale pinball player. Among various, endowments, Xenon sports the first digitized fem ale Voice in an automated pinball game. “ Done by a secretary, working for Bally. Pretty sure that’s the way I heard the story,” says Jan Bradbury, Drop a quarter in her slot, and she; a ck n ow led ges in a w a y that m ight embarrass some o f the more strident feminists. But it’s just a machine, really. Bradbury, along with a few of his Cronies, is a self-admitted “ pinhead.” These are a few of the men behind the machines. Pinheads, “ they even said that bn the news one night. That’s what ‘Pinball P ete’ called ’em ,” according to Mark Pratt, another one of the self-admitted pinheads. The appeal of the little silver ball is simple for Bradbury. “ The allure to m e is the artwork: The playfield, the backglass, and on the cabinet.” The machines have soul, or so it would seem. Despite their aging, the games have had a quiet resurgence in popularity. This and the memories are kept alive by the pinball collectors. And, sustained by quarters spent in arcades. What is it that keeps pulling players in? “ I go for the mechanics and the artwork,” volunteered Bradbury. But there is certainly more at stake here. Perhaps it is the appeal to the little child that rests inside everyone of us, sort of like a universal need to play. The MU has a pinball arcade that always seems busy with flashing lights, mechanical sounds, and the ever present jingle of quarters being fed into slots. : “ I used to play there as a kid. I ’m actually putting together the gam e I was playing the day Kennedy got shot. Short Stop Baseball. The one with mechanical animation: The runners run around the backglass,” says Bradbury. Sitting in Bradbury’s living room are three machines. How did he get started in pinball? “ Playing it as a kid. I didn’t start collecting them until about three years ago. And now w e’re into about 20 keepers. There’s not one in the bedroom yet, or the bathroom, but about four in the living room. What’s his personal favorite, right now? “ Centaur. It has a a guy with a tatoo which reads ‘Pinball F orever.’ ” And this machine, Centaur, has a voice as well. It let’s the player know what is going on. “ Stupid Human,” it exclaims. What a user friendly machine. Bruce Carlton is another member of the unofficial pinhead group. He is also rumored to have one o f the finest collections of pinball machines anywhere. How did he get started? “ Until 1980,1 was normal, you know,” he says, with more than a touch of humor, “ I had this friend who urged me to buy one game. I got Black Knight. Not long after that, I got a Firepow er.” And the rest is history. Carlton posed with a few of his games for us, and then he showed us a room that was full of disassembled machines. He has a few true classics carefully setu p in his living room as well. These are items that are from the dawn of pinball. Games built in the late 40’s and early 50’s. Carlton says he “ just likes the gam es.” P a rt of the appeal must be in scrounging around rummage sales and other similar outlets, always looking for the good deal. “ Fireball, that’s a classic. Some of them go for $1000 now. I paid $75 in a garage sale,” says Bradbury. The allure of. the machines worked. While shooting pictures, both photographers wound up playing pinball. “ Just one more game, here let m e try that one,” said Jeorgette Douglas. She put her cam era away. The games are still fun and the collectors are around to ensure the popularity . Page 18 State Presa J )W rfn «d a y ^ c to b «^ j^ 9 9 0 T h e y sh o u ld have stayed dead M o vie Review than an hour, compressing some of the action of a whole night into this time frahne. By KRAMER W ETZEL S tate Press Then, just as the daylight begins to shine through, the m ovie takes an unexpected twist. It tries to have a message. It’s back, it’s bad, and it definitely deserves viewing. It’s a remake of George Rom ero’s all-time classic, the cult favorite N ig h t o f the L iv in g Dead. What a te rrib le m o v ie ! O f course the orig in a l 1968 blackand-w hite N ig h t o f the L iv in g Dead is a classic film in many respects. And though this remake uses essentially the same exact footage as the original, a bit of the dialogue has been rewritten. There are some serious problems with this: a slash trash m ovie shouldn’t ever try to be m orally uplifiting. Just won’t work. Doesn’t belong. The film m aker breaks a given trust with the film view er when this happens. Moralizing is fine in art films, Streep films, and their ilk. Not in a Romero ; work. ; The monsters themselves are pretty comical and the zombies demonstrate some of the finest acting so far, for zombies. But what is really missing from this flick is either the utter brutality that Rom ero and his production crew is capable of or the black humor camp that is equally amusing, if equally repulsive as well. Nuances have been added. Themes and concepts have been stuck in. Remember, this is a horror movie. No plot to speak of. Zombies sticking body parts , through windows for a whole hour. Matter of f a c t , t h e r e is n ’ t m u ch a c t io n o r characterization, either. What acting there is, while it isn’t bad, certainly doesn’t seem to be too inspired. The story is pretty simple: A bunch of people are locked into a farmhouse and assualted in various ways by zombies. The attack goes on for a little more Courtesy of Columbia Pictures Industries Inc. None of this matters anyway. This is a great halloween movie. K ram er Bob says two stars. Check it out. An arm y o f flesh eating zom bies p repare to feast in N ig h t o f the Living Dead. GIANT COUPON SAVINGS OVER 70% French Neon & Rubber B um perz Sunglasses $500 •100% uv •Savings over 70% original price S17-S21 •With coupon thru 10-21-90 TANK TOPS SUNCLOUD SUNGLASSES F R O M $770 $2500 BODY GLOVE SUNGLASSES •Special Selection •Original price $60-$98 •Optical glass lenses •Savings over 70% •With coupon thru 10-21-90 •Optical quality •1 0 0 % UV •Savings to 70% •With coupon thru 10-21-90 T-SHIRTS SOLID SWEATS $600 $800 $900 •Huge assortment •Includes all tanks originally from $7-$14 •With coupon thru 10-21-90 •Huge selection •R eg. prices $11,99-$14 •Limit 3 per coupon thru 10-21-90 -íé jC pacific Ê y e s & T s Th• Sunglass Leader •Tops & bottoms •R eg. price $13 •Huge assortment •W ith coupon thru 10-21-90 GARGOYLE SUNGLASSES "$ 4 3 4 0 •Savings to 30% •100% UV •Impact Resistant •With coupon thru 10-21-90 PRINTED SW EATSHIRTS 12oo $ •Special selection •Reg. price $14.99-$18.99 •With coupon thru 10-21 -90 Cornerstone • 725 South Rural Road Across from ASU in Tempe 965-5560 ► London...from ► Paris........from ► A thens....from ► M oscow .from ► C airo.......from $509. $6 1 9 . $719. $839. $8 3 9 . —RT from Phoenix— —Subject to Change— —Special Discount Fares Domestic & International— —CALL SOON FOR HOLIDAY T R A V E L - 855 W. University Dr. Suite 20 - Extension Rd. Mesa, AZ 85201 (602) 834-1700 CARP M eeting Tonight 7 p.m. MU Yavapai Room Three Stages of Life 1. Womb 3. Spirit World 9 m on th s in a w o rld o f liq u id Tbprcpare E tern a l rea lm o f lo v e Like begets like, so spirits congregate according to their maturity of love. a healthy physical foundation. Every child is the extension of parental love as life comes from love. The lack of an absolute standard of parental love causes spiritually v malnourished and even unwanted babies. Physical birth defects, for example those which are caused by chemical addiction,, are also the result of ignorant or immature parents. ' ,< f X ■iu\ t 2. Earth I ¡W A ir en v iro n m e n t -8 0 yea rs The purpose of physical life is to grow a healthy spirit. Its perfection depends on how much you love God over worldly things. Love is the only asset you can take with you to the spirit world. When the spirit graduates from its physical existence, the physical body is discarded in the same way as the placenta is thrown away upon birth. More info contact CARP: 966-3877 Those who live here on earth with a self-centered way of life, regardless of their positions as noted religious or world leaders, will end up in the lowest realms of hell—the world of regret. Got "boxes and boxes of s tu ff? Sell it with a S ta te P re s s , classified ad! W e ’re located in th e ' b asem ent of M atthew s C enter . . 965-6731 t e l e Press Page Wednesday, O ctober 17,1990 19 Opening arguments begin in 2 Live Grew trial FO R T LA U D E R D A LE , Fla. (A P ) — The bawdy rappers of 2 L ive Crew knew they w ere crossing the legal line into obscenity at a concert that landed them in court, a prosecutor said in opening arguments Tuesday. Band leader Luther Campbell spoke to the audience about his “ X-rated” music, prosecutor Leslie Robson said at the obscenity trial, where observers under age 18 have been barred. Campbell and two other band members face misdemeanor obscenity charges in a case that has raised important legal questions over censorship, cultural values and the American jury system. “ He knew there was something wrong,” Robson said of Campbell’s behavior. “ That there was a problem, that there was a controversy, that there was something wrong with that m aterial that would open him up up to some kind of liability.” The charges against Campbell and band members Chris Wongwon and Mark Ross stem from their rap performance at a Hollywood nightclub June 10. Another member, who did not rap, wasn’t charged. I f convicted, each face up to a year in prison and fines of up to $1,000. Defense attorney Bruce Rogow warned jurors they might hear words that offend them, but must put that feeling aside in judging if the words m eet the legal definition o f obscenity. “ This is not about offending people,” Rogow said. “ This is about a legal test.” . The disputed concert cam e four days after a federal judge in Fort Lauderdale ruled the group’s sexually explicit album “ As Nasty As They Wanna B e” was obscene. The album includes references to oral and anal sex and sexual violence against women. E arlier this month, an all-white jury convicted a black record store owner of obscenity for selling the album. The band and some free-speech advocates contend the prosecution is rooted in whites’ misunderstanding of black culture or animosity toward young blacks. Robson alleged that band members performed several acts on stage that she considered “ deviant sexual behavior.” Campbell, the prosecutor said, pressed the head of a woman toward his crotch and Ross exposed the breast of a young woman dancing on the stage. Broward County Judge June Johnson decided to exclude people under age 18 from the trial. Rogow agreed with the move, saying the trial would deal with adult material. The six-member jury includes one black and a composition M a e s t r o L e o n a r d B e r n s t e in NEW Y O R K (A P ) — Leonard Bernstein, the flamboyant American maestro hailed around the world for his fiery style, was quietly buried beside his w ife Tuesday afternoon in a private ceremony. A closed funeral service in Manhattan was followed by burial at Greenwood Cemetery in Brooklyn, where Bernstein’s wife, actress Felicia Montealegre, was interred in 1978. C h o r e o g r a p h e r J e r o m e R o b b in s , com p oser Stephen Sondheim, author W illiam Styron and conductor Michael Tilson Thomas w ere among mourners arriving in a 21-car funeral procession. d ie s , b u r ie d “ Leonard Bernstein was a revolutionary music master. He led a joyous revolution,” Thomas said in a statement released Tuesday. “ He taught us to listen through the notes to what the music was really saying . . . A ll musicians stand in his debt. He was the best friend w e ever had.” The limousines left about 40 minutes after the burial service began. Cem etery security kept reporters and photographers away. Bernstein is survived by his mother, Jennie, his son Alexander, who is a teacher, and daughters Jamie Thomas, a rock musician, and Nina Bernstein, an actress. that pleased the rap group and its lawyers. They had complained that the pool from which the jurors w ere selected had too many whites and older people and thus was incapable of fairly judging the black group. The jury includes a retired psychology professor who has questioned the validity of obscenity laws and a 24-year-old office worker with a music degree. Attorneys on both sides maneuvered much o f the morning to settle several questions on admissibility of evidence, and the judge ruled that a transcript of the 45-minute concert would be excluded from the trial. The state contended the transcript was a necessary aid for the jurors, but the defense said the transcript would be a distraction. The jury instead w ill have to depend on a poorquality recording of the performance. The judge granted a request from the prosecution to allow four songs from the album to be played at trial. The defense promised to object if the songs are introduced. Most obscenity cases are argued on a Supreme Court test that holds m aterial is obscene if the average person, applying community standards, finds it is designed to stir sexual arousal, if it depicts sex in a patently offensive way, or lacks literary, artistic, political or scientific value. in p r iv a t e c e r e m o n y The three children spoke during the service at Bernstein’s Manhattan home, as d id R a b b i M a r s h a ll T . M e y e r and Bernstein’s brother Burton, said the maestro’s publicist, M argaret Carson. The funeral service did not include music, ‘ she said. Flags at Lincoln Center, where the New York Philharmonic performs, remained at half-staff Tuesday to honor the conductor who died Sunday of cardiac arrest caused by lung failure. The death cam e four days after he retired from conducting because of poor health. A m em orial concert is planned for C a rn egie H a ll on N ov. 14, the 47th anniversary of Bernstein’s Philharmonic debut. T h e P h ilh a r m o n ic , w h ic h n am ed Bernstein its first American music director in 1958, w ill perform an all-Bernstein program beginning Thursday night and continuing through Oct. 23. The schedule had called for works by Shostakovich and Beethoven. Bernstein had planned to conduct an Oct. 28 benefit AID S concert for the Gay Men’s Health Crisis at Carnegie Hall. Sponsors said they w ill perform a musical tribute to Bernstein that night. GO INTERNATIONAL THIS WINTER Questions Study & Travel in Europe this Winter Break! S e e th e w o rld ’s g r e a te s t cities! L e a rn a b o u t In te r n a tio n a l B u s in e s s ! M e e t e x e c u tiv e s o f m a jo r c o rp o ra tio n s ! Travel & earn academic credit!! Informational Meeting Thursday, October 18,1990 BA 137, 1:40-3:00 p.m. If you cannot attend, contact: International Business Seminars at 830-0902 or Dr. Dick Montanari (BA 3231) at 965-7203 or 438-2278 or Wes Davis (BA 367B) at 965-5031. Discover the exciting world of International Business! THE VOLKSWAGEN COLLEGE TRADITION... That was then, STATE PRESS 99 m ■ THIS IS NOW!! ,995 The tradition hasn’t changed. It’s Just been updated. The 1990 VOLKSWAGEN Cabriolet. Uferdone V o l k s w a g e n , w e m a k e t h e c o l l e g e r id e e a s ie r 15th Street & Camelback Road * 265-6600 CALL 965-7572 8am -5pm DAILY Comics Page 20 Wednesday, October 17,1990 Calvin and Hobbes EVEWOHE TAKES ME FOR GRAUTED.' NOBODY PAYS AHI ATTENTION TO MV NEEDS/ Stale Press by Bill Watterson by Gary Larson SEE?/ r DONT MATTER TO ANYONE ! NOBOOT CARES ABOUT ME ! IS IT TOO MUCH TO ASH FOR. AH OCCASIONAL TOKEN GESTORE OF APPRECIATION?/ .V t h e f a r s id e n ^ Doonesbury by Garry Trudeau SMALL TOWN IN OHIO. YOU NEVER HEAFP : OF IT. inhere you FROM?: WHAT TOWN? Llamas at home Rainey Days by Julie Sigwart T h a t's t ile tic k e t! S ta te P ress C la s s ifie d s k . ^one^ $300 Pitchers $140 w ell Drinks $175 Bowling/ p e r g am e M o n d a y -T h u rs d a y 9 p .m .-M id n ig h t RUN FROM THE SUN!! Tl W OI O SALE ! Roundtrip from Phoenix London $519 Frankfurt $547 Amsterdam $428 Parts $460 Hong Kong $709 Bangkok $799 Restrictions do apply Student status may be inquired. , Mon-Fri ^ Noon til 6 p.m. Eura!¡passes issued on-the-spot! $1.00 Per Game Call for a FREE Student Travel Catalog! (plu s tax) America's oldest and largest student travel organization! tem pebo w l 1100 E. APACHE • 967-1656 Council Travel 14515 Ventura Blvd. #250 Sherman Oaks, CA. 91403 800-888-8786 , RANCHO PALO S VERDES, Calif. (A P ) — You might call them postcards from the ledge. Artist Nick Agid carves messages into slabs of stone and mails them to politicians, celebrities, world leaders, authors and fellow artisans. Using m aterial left over from his sculpture work, Agid has lovingly etched m ore than 600 mineral missives out of onyx, marble and granite. “ It Started out being a whim and it became a serious art project,” he says. He spends about an hour chiseling a message into each polished stone, always including a request for a reply. The cost of mailing the four- to five-pound cards is heavy — up to $10 a throw, and much more for international celebrities. But Agid doesn’t mind. “ The responses w ere so humorous, it became kind of addicting to check the m ail and see who wrote me back,’’ he said. “ I got a letter from the pope and Ted Kennedy on the same day.” Many who have gotten the rock cards — including President Bush, Elizabeth Taylor, director Mel Brooks, author Ray Bradbury and actor Vincent Price — have responded. P rice sent his response on the inner sole of a shoe, writing, “ Upon m y sole, I ’ve never had such a heavy fan letter. 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SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES * A SPECIAL TESTING PACKAGE: ^ 4 y ™ (Includes exam and tests for chlamydia, gonorrhea, trichomonas, gardnerella, and yeast.) 21 West Baseline Road, Tempe S/W Corner of Baseline and Mill Phone 831-5532 Expires 1-15-91 $65) | I I Stott Pk m Page 21 Wednesday, October 17,1990 Injury no concern to U O ’s Musgrave B y DAN ZEIG ER S ta te Press In regard to his playing condition, timing has never been one o f Oregon quarterback B ill M usgrave’s strong suits. Unfortunately for the Ducks, Musgrave has succumbed to injury at points when his team needed him most. In 1988, UO was 6-1 b e fo r e M u s g ra v e su ffe re d a broken collarbone against ASU and was lost for the rem ainder of the season. The Ducks, who have a reputation as e a rly Rose Bowl contenders that fade in the second half of the season, felt the rug go but from under them one more time, finishing 6-5. Now, Musgrave has gotten hurt at another bad time. Musgrave, who has completed 124 of 212 passes for 1,573 yards and 11 touchdowns this season, pulled an abdominal muscle in the Ducks’ 38-17 loss to Washington last weekend. UO coach Rich Brooks said Musgrave is doubtful to play when the Ducks host ASU Saturday at 7 p.m. in the first night gam e at Autzen Stadium in 12 years. “ The timing o f the injuries aren’t that frustrating because I don’t think that this One is really serious,” Musgrave said. “ In 1988,1 had to have m y shoulder operated on and that pretty much ended m y season, but this injury doesn’t w orry m e because it’s not as serious.” M usgrave is not scheduled to practice today but is keeping the faith. “ I feel a lot better today than I did yesterday,” Musgrave said. “ If the game was today or tomorrow, I don’t think I would play, but w e ’ll see how .it feels’ on Thursday.” Although Musgrave completed 22 of 45 passes for 302 yards against Washington, he was hurried on several occasions, sacked four times and failed to throw a touchdown pass for only the third time in the last two years. Musgrave said he cannot point out exactly when he was hurt because the injury did not bother him during the game. “ I r e a lly don’ t rem em b er how it happened,” : Musgrave said. “ I Started noticing it after the gam e was over, so I really can’t point out one particular play where I suffered the injury.” I f history is an accurate barometer, the Ducks certainly w ill not want Musgfave on the sidelines for long. A t UO, which has produced quarterbacks such as future N F L Hall-of-Famer Dan Fouts and current Atlanta Falcon starter Chris Miller, Musgrave is at the top of the school’s all-time passing list with 8,707 yards and 65 touchdowns. He has a career completion percentage of 57.5 and has thrown only 44 interceptions in 1,182 attempts. M u s g ra v e is a ls o th e w in n in g est quarterback in UO history, as the Ducks are 22-11 in games he has started. In two of the losses, against Cal in 1987 and ASU in 1988, Musgrave was injured and unable to continue. “ I really didn’t know just how far I ’d come when I first started here,” Musgrave said.“ Just being able to play here was a dream of mine. To perform at the level of the guys who have been here in the past is great.” • Brooks has said he would not trade Musgrave for any other quarterback in the country and cannot believe his pivot did not garner many individual honors after last Season, when he passed fo r 3,081 yards and 22 scores in leading the Ducks to their first bowl appearance since 1963. But Musgrave, who was mentioned as an All-Am erica candidate before the start of the year and has put up numbers worthy of postseason award consideration, said he is not aware o f his — or anyone else’s — Heisman Trophy chances. “ I really don’t know how I stack up,” Musgrave said. “ I don’t get a chance to read the papers or look at any of the other players that much because I ’ve always got other things on m y mind. Right now, the only thing concerning me is getting ready for Arizona State.” Saturday’s gam e will prove to be an important one for UO, who is 4-2 overall but winless in two conference games. The Ducks, who need a healthy Musgrave tt keep any postseason hopes alive, would hate to think about their fortunes without him. But Musgrave said he wants to do all he can in order for the Sun Devils to see No. 1' over center. “ The only thing on my mind is winning the rest of our games and getting into another bowl,” Musgrave said. “ That’s what is on people’s minds up here. I don’t think w e can control our own fate for the Rose Bowl because too many other teams have to lose and I don’t think that’s going to happen.” Musgrave, who has a 3.25 grade point average in finance, has made the Pac-lO’s All-Academic Team in each of the last two .seasons. University of Oregon O regon quarterback B ill M usgrave has com pleted 124 o f 212 passes fo r 1,573 yards and 11 touchdow ns th is Season. J» • S- •Sun D evil fullback Jeff Simoneau missed practice Tuesday for the second consecutive day. ASU Coach L a rry M arm ie said Simoneau might quit the team, adding that he expects to talk to him to try to resolve the issue within a couple of days. •Bret Powers, who M arm ie named Monday as the Sun D evils’ starting quarterback against Oregon, threw in practice Tuesday after being lim ited to snaps and handoffs Monday because of a sore shoulder. •ASU split end E ric Guliford, who suffered a sprained ankle in last w eek’s game against C aliforn ia, is listed as doubtful fo r Saturday. V o lleyb a ll blanks N A U fo r 2nd tim e this season B y GREG ZELE S ta te Press The ASU volleyball team cut it close last night but in the end it avoided the Lady Jack blade as it triumphed in three games over N AU in timber country. The victory marked the second time this season the Sun D evils, (12-10 overall, 3-6 Pac-10) have beaten the Lady Jacks (6-18) in three games giving ASU a sweep for the year. NAU , however, refused to roll over and give up. ASU won by close scores of 15-13, 15-11 and 17-15. Even though the Sun Devils out hit the Lady Jacks 266 to .181, NAU compiled more total kills (64-56) than ASU. The Lady Jacks had m ore kills in every gam e but the last Senior middle blocker Tina B erg made up for the fact that she only tallied one block by contributing 10 kills on attack. The NAU attack was powered by outside h itters ju n ior K a ty M cC orm ick and sophomore Angel Leath who turned in 19 and 15 kill performances, respectively. Penney one where the Sun Devils managed a 19-18 advantage. Junior outside hitter Debbie Penney led ASU with 15 kills. Sophomore setter Jennifer Helfrich also had a big night on offense with three service aces and 43 sets. The Lady Jacks also won the battle in the trenches. N AU out dug the Sun Devils 50-40. McCormick paced the Lady Jacks in digs with 14. Joann Clemente was a close second for NAU with 13 digs. Nobody on ASU really stepped forward to have a big night in digs as the Sun Devils managed to scatter their digs among the players. Gowell led ASU with eight digs and Helfrich had seven/ The Lady Jacks out blocked the Sun Devils at the net. Despite N A U ’s lack of solo blocks, it accumulated a total of 11 blocks compared to ASU’s nine. Sun D evil sophomore middle blocker Am y Nelson, who only saw floor time in one game, gave a tremendous performance at the net. The 20-year old Nelson, a form er basketball p layer from Old Dominion University, had two solo Mocks and two block assists. The ASU volleyball team w ill return to action as it hosts Washington State and Washington Friday and Saturday in the University Activity Center. Both contests are slated to begin at 7:30 p.m. Men’s golf, M ickelson finish 2nd at Taylor Made Classic From s taff reports Sun D evil junior Phil Mickelson let a second-round three-stroke lead over TexasE1 Paso’s Paul Stankowski slip away forcing a playoff round at the Taylor Made/Red R iver Classic Tuesday in Dallas. The Miners won the team title with a 21-stroke victory over the Sun Devils, who trailed U T E P by 11 shots after two rounds o f play. Oklahoma finished third, three shots back of ASU. Stankowski, the younger brother of form er Sun D evil All-American Tom, shot a three-under-par 69 to finish the event at 11-under. He then birdied the third playoff hole to capture individual honors over Mickelson. Vs Mickelson led the tournament after 36 holes after posting a three-under score in the first half and an eight-under in the second round. His third-round even-par score placed him in the tie with Stankowski to force a playoff. In addition to Mickelson, two other Sun Devils finished amongst the top 20. Junior Scott Sullivan finished in a tie for 12th (68-71-76-215) and Jason Spitler tied for 19th (73-70-74-217) in his collegiate debut. Rounding out the ASU scores are Brett Dean (73-72-76-221), tied fo r 32nd, and Cade S to n e (7 1 -8 4 -7 7 ) a n d J im L e m o n (75-77-80-232), who tied for 65th. The Sun Devils return to action Nov. 16 at the G olf World/Palmetto Dunes Invitational in Hilton Head, S. C. Mickelson, however, w ill return to action sooner as he represents the United States at the World Team Amateur Championship in Auckland, New Zealand, later this month. Wednesday, O ctober 17,1990 Page 22 Reds surprise A’s to capture Game 1 i rtfle d erf In a good man's eyes, le look and you know there's something special about this man-something tnat sets him apart. Not every one can control a sophis ticated fighter that flies at twice the speed o f sound. ■takes confidence. It takes Viahne officer, ad like to see whether you /hat it takes to beaM arine ______|look this man in the eye. If you think you re up to it. . >_&. call 1-800-MARINES.. unless, o f course, you r e ¿-r have a fear o f heights. IflH T iM IV S The Fen: The Proud. TheMarines. Associated Press photo C incinnati R eds’ Eric Davis (44) celebrates w ith team m ate B illy H atcher (2 2 ) afte r h ittin g a tw onm hom er against th e O akland A thletics in th e R eds’ 7-0 victo ry in gam e one o f the W orld Series Tuesday. C IN C IN N A T I (A P ) — The A ’s aren’t invincible, after all. The Cincinnati Reds shocked Oakland and maybe even themselves Tuesday night; routing the Athletics 7-0 in Game 1 of the World S e r i« . It was Jose R ijo who was awesome, not Dave Stewart. Rijo, a former Athletics prospect, pitched seven shutout innings and ended Oakland’s 10-game winning streak in the postseason. jn ú m m “ I ’d heard so much about the Oakland A ’s. Going into today’s game, I had hoped what happened would happen,” R ijo said. Stewart, meanwhile, was wild from the s ta rt and lasted only fou r innings. Baseball’s best big-game pitcher had his worst postseason appearance ever. “ The only pitch that failed m e was my fastball,” he said. “ You just have to keep going and hope you’re able to gain control.” T u rn If you are interested in a M ARINE CORP. FLIG HT O RIENTATIO N PROGRAM on O ctober 18 & 19, please c a ll us at 257-0310. to World Series, page 23. t a ATTENTION any student interested in applying for THE N A T IO N A L H O N O R AR Y WHO'S WHO among students in American colleges and univer sities, may pick up their application at Associated Students on the third floor of the Memorial Union. ZENÈTH data systems Groupe Bull 40% -50% DISCOUNTS FOR EDUCATION ED PRICE Harddisk, an external 3.5" 720K drive, 1MB R A M , a 9.5" Dayhright screen, parallel, serial and R O B ports, three hour Part No. Z L -l-II. $1399 $2399 DON’T LEAVE FOR CLASS WITHOUT IT!! S u p e r s p o r t 286 is an 80286, switcliabie 12/6 Mhz, zero wait state laptop with 20 M B harddisk, one 3.5" 1.4 M B floppy drive, 1 M B ò f R A M » parallel port, serial port, arid a full size The deadline for application is 5 p.m., Oct. 31,1990 RETAIL M in iS p O r t HD laptop is a 10 M hz 80C88 processor, 20MB battery, a n d a n A C adapter/charger. Those students applying must have a minimum of a 2.2 C P A and no less than 60 hours. je \ j$ backlit supertwist L C D Microsoft DOS. screen. Software included is $1999 Part No. ZWL-200-2. $3499 $3899 FAST, POWERFUL AND PORTABLE!! 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State Press
Page 23
W ed n esd ay^ cto b eM T ^ W O
W o rld Series
Continued fro m page 22.
It was E ric Davis who got the big hit, not Jose Canseco,
Mark McGwire or the rest of Oakland’s bruisers,
Davis, Cincinnati’s slumping star who has been bothered
by a sore left shoulder and aching wrists and ankles, pierced
the A ’s aura right aw ay with a two-run homer in the first
inning.
“ I was fortunate to get off to a good start, and everybody
kept going,” he said. “ When I ’m healthy and swing the bat
w ell, I drive in a lot of runs and that takes the pressure off
everybody.”
It was Billy Hatcher who provided the spark, not Rickey
Henderson.
Hatcher went 3-for-3 with two doubles and a walk, and led
an aggressive attack on the bases.
“ Any time you get a ' lead against the A ’s, that’s
something,” Hatcher said.
During the Athletics’ 10-game breeze through the
postseason, they never trailed by m ore than one run. In last
yea r’s World Series sweep, they never trailed at all.
Henderson did have three hits, including two doubles, but
nothing he did matched what Hatcher did for the Reds.
Most of all, it was the underdog Reds, not the top-dog
Athletics. B y the fourth inning, Cincinnati led 4-0 — matching
the total number of runs the A ’s g a ve up in sweeping Boston
in the American League playoffs — and by the time Rob
Dibble relieved R ijo to start the eighth, it was over and it
matched Oakland’s worst shutout defeat of the season.
“ Everyone had us projected to win the first gam e,”
Oakland manager Tony La Russa said. “ The club that wins it
gets a leg Up end has a little extra confidence and gets some
of that momentum. So they have that edge and it makes it
pretty clear that it’s our responsibility to try to get even.”
Cincinnati’s victory put the World Series in a different
light. Color it Red, for now. That was the color on almost
every person in the crowd of 55,830 on Tuesday night.
F or the Athletics, it was not a devastating defeat — not like
the Kirk Gibson gam e in the 1988 World Series, from which
they never recovered. But it did show that baseball’s
winningest team could not win them all.
Only two teams, the New York Yankees in 1927-28 and
1938-39, had swept consecutive World Series. The first club,
Murderers’ Row with Ruth and Gehrig, also swept the 1932
Series for a record 12 straight postseason victories.
Oakland w ill try to start a one-game winning streak
Wednesday night in Game 2 when Bob Welch faces Danny
Jackson.
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State Press
Wednesday, O ctober 17,1990
P a g e jM
Smith refuses to suspend USC athletes
LOS AN G E LE S (A P ) - USC coach Larry
Smith on Tuesday angrily defended his
decision not to suspend three freshmen
charged with misdemeanors in connection
with an alleged sexual assault.
In his weekly meeting with reporters,
Smith at first refused comment on the
situation, but later said it wasn’t his place to
discipline the players.
. “ I ’m not suspending people for something
that really has nothing to do with playing the
season,” he said. “ I f you suspend a person,
you’re saying, ‘You’re guilty.’ I don’t think
you can do that.
“ W e’re not a judge and jury. It’s best to
let the courts handle it.”
Outside linebacker W illie McGinest, 18,
cornerback Jason Oliver, 18. and tailback
Michael Jones, 18, were charged Monday in
connection with an alleged July 20 incident
at a campus dormitory.
A 23-year-old graduate student, who was a
peer counselor in a summer college
introduction program in which the players
participated, alleged the three took her to a
room and assaulted her.
Jones was charged with one count of
sexual battery and one count of false
imprisonment while McGinest and Oliver
w ere each charged with one count of battery
and one count of false imprisonmënt.
Smith said he didn’t believe college
athletes should be subjected to higher
standards of conduct than non-athletes.
“ I think college athletes should be treated
exactly the sam e as any other students,"
Smith said.
Meanwhile, Smith praised the Trojans’
offensive performance in Saturday’s 37-22
victory over Stanford. Southern Cal (5-1
overall, 2-1 in the Pacific-10 Conference)
rolled up a season-high 500 yards.
The offense was in sync from the start, but
the defense almost figured in a record
setting performance by the Cardinal, Smith
said.
Cardinal quarterback Jason Palumbis
passed for 230 yards in the first quarter as
Stanford jumped to a 16-7 lead.
“ In the first quarter, w e were probably
well on our way to setting an NCAA record
for most passing yards in a gam e to about
960 yards,” Smith said. “ Fortunately we
began to play better. There was no
explanation, except that w e w ere standing
around.”
In the second and third quarters,
however, Southern Cal scored on five of
seven possessions, and quarterback Todd
Marinovich finished with a career-high 338
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CROSSW ORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
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A X YD LB A A X R
is L O N G F E L L O W
ANY DRINK OR LONGNECK IN THE BAR!
(Single Shot Drinks)
THUR
One letter stands for another. In this sam ple A is used
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hints. E ach day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE
and
10-17
Witchers
V R s
NO COVER — EVER
Rural & University in Tem pe
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songs
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4 Hostels
Yesterday’s Answer
14 Refinery
5 Actor
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as hair
work
needs
6 Rosary
29 Ship of
20 Gullet
15 East or
item
the desert
W e s t,
21 Cut hay
30 Dwelling
7 Loosen
24 Start of
islands
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any
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Python’s
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17 Archaic
Michael
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35 Garfield
title
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11 Parisian
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19 Bam
policeman
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36 Buckeye
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17 Time
state
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D A IL Y C R YPTO Q U O TES -
Noon Til We Close
SUN
date)
ACROSS
B E FO R E CALLING THE INSURANCE COMPANY
CALL
BA K ER & MARCUS
TUES
Starting tailback Ricky Ervins, out since
Sept. 29 with an injured ankle, practiced
Monday and could see action against the
Wildcats, Smith said.
“ M y guess is that he w ill be available for
duty and I hope he can play some,” Smith
said.
YRIGHTS!
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MON
“ W e ’ re p la y in g p erh ap s the best
defensive team in the conference this week
so w e’ve got a lot of work cut out for us,” he
said. “ M y feeling on Arizona is it’s the best
defensive team w e’ve played so far other
than Washington (a 31-0 USC loss).”
BUY1DOZEN,6ETA2NDDOZENFREE...
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yards.
USC’s offense has 966 yards in its last two
outings, but it w ill get a test Saturday when
the 15th-ranked Trojans host Arizona (4-2,
2-2), Smith said.
967-3192
Ike, T.C.B.; Tarence, your year; Brian, it’s your thing.
D S Z T Q G
VR S
VRS
VDZGTYDSTTQD
K T
O S W Z P T S
L ZC
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W D Q L A S A . - M KG
R P O O Z D A
Yesterday’s Cryptoquote: THE BEST BLOOD
WILL AT SOME TIME GET INTO A FOOL OR A
MOSQUITO. — AUSTIN O’MALLEY
© 1990 by King Features Syndicate, Inc
Sitate Pitti
Phoenix trades
defensive end
fo r draft pick
(A P ) — Injury-prone defensive end David Galloway, who
has played only 24 regular-season games the last four
Seasons, was traded Tuesday by the Phoenix Cardinals to the
Denver Broncos for an undisclosed future draft pick.
The Cardinals also Waived linebacker Reggie McKenzie off
their injured-reserve list, re-signed rookie wide receiver
Amod Field for the practice squad and announced that
defensive tackle Bob Clasby will miss the rest of the season
after undergoing another m ajor knee operation.
In addition, starting right guard Lance Smith was arrested
Tuesday morning in connection with a domestic dispute but
was not expected to miss Sunday’s N F L game against the
N ew York Giants.
Phoenix police spokesman Leo Speliopoulos said the
6-foot-2,285-pound Smith was taken into custody at 7:15 a.m.
after “ a domestic violence situation” at his Phoenix home,
where he lives with his w ife and two sons.
Smith was booked into Maricopa County Jail on
investigation of one count of misdemeanor assault and was
released at 8:59 a.m., police said.
Smith’s wife, Felicia, said there was a domestic squabble
but she will not press charges against her husband and
insisted that he was never arrested or booked.
Cardinals general manager Larry Wilson said Smith's
situation was "a fam ily problem” and the organization would
have no official comment on I t but it would not keep the sixthyear pro out of the lineup Sunday at East Rutherford, N. J.
Galloway’s trade came as a surprise since he was expected
to be activated off the injured list this week and Wilson had
said his team planned to stand pat during Tuesday’s trading
deadline.
But Wilson said talks with the Broncos “ heated up”
Tuesday morning and the deal was done at 11 a.m. — two
hours before the deadline.
“ I think it’s the best for both parties,” said Wilson. “ Our
feeling is that we want to have people on the field to practice
and play and David was having a hard time doing that. Going
to Denver gives him a new opportunity.”
Galloway, a nine-year pro who was the Cardinals’ secondround draft pick from Florida in 1982, missed all but four
games in 1987 with a fractured left forearm suffered in
training camp.
He played in only eight games in 1988 after breaking his left
thumb in a preseason gam e and straining his right arch
during a practice. >
Last season. Galloway broke his right thumb in the seasonopener at Detroit and missed two games, then missed two
more games with a right calf pull suffered Nov. 5 against the
Giants.
The 6-foot-3,265-pound Galloway suffered another strained
right arch during training camp this year and was placed on
IR on Sept. 4.
He was moved to the practice squad last Tuesday and
Field, a free agent from Monclair (N . J.) State was waived.
Field, who caught one pass for 18 yards in the preseason,
originally was cut Sept. 3 when Phoenix trimmed its roster to
the league limit of 47. He was re-signed Oct. 2 for the fiveman practice squad.
The Cardinals currently have only four on that squad and
Wilson said he plans to add another player Wednesday.
McKenzie, a fifth-year pro signed by Phoenix as a Plan B
free agent in 1989, missed all last season after injuring his left
. knee in a preseason game and undergoing reconstructive
surgery.
He re-injured the knee during training camp this year and
•was placed on IR on Aug. 27.
“ Reggie cannot come back to us and play this season,”
Wilson said. “ But some other team can claim him off waivers
and he could play for them this y e a r."
Clasby. who missed 12 games after reconstructive surgery
on his left knee last year, had the same operation on his right
knee Tuesday to repair his anterior cruciate ligament.
He tore the ligament in the Sept. 9 season-opener at
Washington, was put on IR after arthroscopic surgery
Sept. 13 and then re-injured the knee during a practice drill
here Saturday.
“ His knee buckled while he was working on a blocking
sled,” Cardinals coach Joe Bugel said. “ He was looking
forward to coming back f